All posts by adongabriel

The Torah’s Hidden Mathematical Code

The Torah’s Hidden Mathematical Code – Someone Is Rewriting the Blueprint. If the Torah is primarily a book of laws, why does God begin with stories instead of commandments?

This question puzzled me for years. The first sixty-six chapters contain zero laws — just one story after another. Creation, Adam and Eve, Noah, the Flood, the Patriarchs. Why start this way? The answer is powerful: Stories create reality. God didn’t legislate the universe into existence. He spoke it into existence.

Genesis is the original software of creation — the Tree of Life Blueprint. For the last twelve years, I’ve been studying with Rabbi David Fohrman, Ephraim Paulvinov, Rabbi Mendel Kessin, and Professor Haim Shore. What Professor Shore revealed is one of the most extraordinary scientific discoveries ever made about the Torah.

Professor Haim Shore

Professor Haim Shore, a scientist and professor of industrial engineering, took the numeric value of Hebrew words in the Torah and compared them to modern scientific measurements. The results are staggering.The Sun, Earth & Moon: Shemesh (Sun) = 640; Eretz (Earth) = 291; Yareach (Moon) = 218.

These three Hebrew words show an almost perfect linear relationship with the actual diameters, masses, and volumes of the Sun, Earth, and Moon. The correlation is 0.999 — accurate to three decimal places.The Time Cycles: Yom (Day) = 56; Yareach (Month) = 218; Shana (Year) = 355. These three words match the actual astronomical cycles of a day, a lunar month, and a solar year with a correlation of 0.9992.Speed of Light, Sound & Stillness. Or (Light = 207) mathematically corresponds to the speed of light Kol (Sound = 136) corresponds to the speed of sound.

Zero Velocity

D’mama (Stillness = 89) corresponds to zero velocity. The correlation between these three Hebrew words and actual physical speeds is 0.9938. Professor Shore also found powerful correlations between Hebrew planet names and their mass, diameter, and orbital angular momentum. In several cases, the statistical probability that these matches occurred randomly is as low as 0.0033%.

He tested the three phases of water (ice, liquid, steam), Hebrew color names against their exact light frequencies, and Hebrew metal names against their atomic weights. All of them showed remarkably high correlations. One statement from Professor Shore stands above everything else: “If you change even one single letter in any of these Hebrew words, the entire set of mathematical relationships completely collapses.”This is not slowly evolving ancient wisdom.

Mathematical Codes

This is a deliberate, precise mathematical code embedded in the Hebrew language from the beginning. Even King Solomon left us clear proof. In 1 Kings 7:23, the measurements of the Molten Sea in the Temple encode the true value of π to five decimal places through a subtle difference between the written and spoken form of one Hebrew word.

All of this is sitting in a book that much of the world has been told is primitive and outdated. Meanwhile, mainstream science has spent decades rewriting history — hiding evidence, changing timelines, and claiming ancient civilizations were primitive. Yet we continue to discover that earlier civilizations possessed knowledge and technology we still cannot fully explain or reproduce today.

The Jewish people have protected this mathematical code for over 3,300 years while being told our tradition has no value. Now, in our generation, science is slowly catching up to what was already written in the Torah from the very beginning. The blueprint was never lost. Only the story about it was rewritten.

Read the full chapter in my book, Adam, the Blueprint and the Tree of Life.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Milestone 13: The Third Day as the Day of Life and Death for Benjamin

Benjamin The Warrior

(Judges 20:30 – “Then the children of Israel went up against the children of Benjamin on the third day, and put themselves in battle array against Gibeah as at other times.”)

Warren Gage presents this episode from the Civil War against Benjamin as another “third day” pattern of a life-and-death decision. After the horrific gang-rape and murder of the Levite’s concubine in Gibeah (Judges 19), the other tribes demand justice.

Benjamin refuses to hand over the perpetrators. On the third day of battle, Israel defeats Benjamin decisively (Judges 20:30–48), resulting in massive slaughter (25,100 Benjamites killed) and the near-destruction of the tribe. Gage sees this as typological: the concubine’s body divided and sent to the twelve tribes gathers Israel “as one man” (Judg 20:1, 11), paralleling Jesus giving his body to the twelve disciples. The “new Sodom” (Gibeah) is judged, and the third day brings victory, foreshadowing Christ’s triumph over “spiritual Sodom” (Rev 11:8) on the third day.

Based on the Tanakh’s original Hebrew text, historical context, and Jewish interpretive tradition, this milestone does not support a prophetic pattern for Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection on the third day. It is a tragic civil war story about moral outrage, tribal unity, and the consequences of refusing justice. The “third day” is simply the final day of battle, not a resurrection motif.

1. The “Third Day” Is the Climax of Battle, Not a Resurrection Symbol

  • Judges 20:30 explicitly states: “On the third day the children of Israel went up against the children of Benjamin and arrayed themselves against Gibeah as at other times.”
  • This is military narrative pacing: the first two days Israel suffers heavy losses (22,000 then 18,000 killed). On the third day they use ambush tactics and win decisively.
  • No death-and-resurrection sequence. Benjamin is nearly annihilated (25,100 dead, 600 survivors hiding for four months). The “third day” marks victory through strategy, not divine revival or resurrection from the dead.
  • Contrast with Jesus: literal death, burial, bodily resurrection. Here, the third day brings destruction for one tribe, survival for another—no one rises from the dead.

2. The Story Is About Moral Outrage, Tribal Justice, and Near-Destruction – Not Messianic Typology

  • The trigger is the concubine’s gang-rape and murder (Judges 19), echoing Sodom (Gen 19). The Levite dismembers her body and sends pieces to the twelve tribes, rallying Israel “as one man” (Judg 20:1, 11).
  • Benjamin’s refusal to surrender the guilty leads to civil war. The narrative condemns the outrage and shows the danger of tribal loyalty overriding justice.
  • Jewish tradition (Talmud, midrashim) views this as a dark chapter in the period of the Judges—“no king in Israel, everyone did what was right in his own eyes” (Judg 21:25). It warns against moral anarchy and excessive vengeance (as in the near-extinction of the tribe of Benjamin). No classical sources treat the third day as a resurrection foreshadowing or link the concubine’s body to Jesus’ broken body for the twelve disciples.

3. Gage’s Typology Is Highly Allegorical and Lacks Textual Warrant

  • Gage links the concubine’s body divided among twelve tribes to Jesus giving his body to the twelve disciples, and the judgment on “new Sodom” (Gibeah) to Christ’s victory over “spiritual Sodom” (Rev 11:8).
  • These are creative post-resurrection readings, but the Tanakh itself provides no internal signal of messianic prophecy. The story is about civil war and moral failure in a leaderless era, not a preview of a suffering Messiah.
  • The “third day” victory is tactical (an ambush), not a supernatural resurrection. No language of “rising,” “life from death,” or eschatological hope.

4. Broader Tanakh Pattern: “Third Day” as Narrative Device, Not Resurrection Doctrine

  • As seen in previous milestones, “three days” frequently marks a completion, a transition, or a decisive action (such as travel, preparation, or battle). It is not inherently resurrection-coded unless applied in a christological context.
  • Paul’s appeal in 1 Cor 15:4 to “the Scriptures” for the third-day rising has no direct anchor here. Jewish interpreters see no unified “third day resurrection doctrine” in the Tanakh.

Conclusion on Milestone 13

Judges 19–20 is one of the darkest episodes in the Tanakh: sexual violence, dismemberment, civil war, and near-genocide. The “third day” is the final day of battle, where justice (however brutal) is executed. It teaches the consequences of moral anarchy and the cost of tribal loyalty over righteousness. Gage’s reading retrofits New Testament theology, turning a tragic civil conflict into a typology of resurrection. The text itself offers no warrant for seeing a Messiah who dies for sins, is buried, and rises on the third day.

This continues the consistent pattern in Gage’s work: a numerical coincidence (“third day”) is elevated into eschatological foreshadowing, but the original context and Jewish tradition reveal something far more sobering—human failure and the need for righteous leadership.

Why Become Jewish: To Know What Hashem Says, and Here Are The Receipts

Comparing the Sins of Sodom and Gibeah

Both episodes are among the darkest in the Tanakh, and the parallel is intentional. The story of Gibeah (Judges 19–20) deliberately echoes the destruction of Sodom (Genesis 19) to show that the same evil had now infected Israel itself.

1. Core Sin: Gang Rape of a Visitor / Guest

  • Sodom (Gen 19:4–5): All the men of the city, young and old, surround Lot’s house and demand: “Bring them out to us that we may know them” — a clear demand for homosexual gang rape of the two angelic visitors.
  • Gibeah (Judg 19:22): The “perverted men” (literally “sons of Belial”) of the city surround the old man’s house and demand: “Bring out the man who came to your house, that we may know him carnally.”

The language is almost identical. In both cases, the host offers women instead (Lot offers his two virgin daughters; the old man offers his virgin daughter, and the Levite’s concubine). In both cases, the mob refuses the women and insists on the male guest.

2. The Victim and the Outcome

  • Sodom: The visitors are angels. They strike the mob with blindness and then destroy the entire city with fire and brimstone. Lot and his family barely escape.
  • Gibeah: The victim is the Levite’s concubine. She is thrown out to the mob, gang-raped and abused all night, and dies at the doorstep by morning. The Levite then dismembers her body and sends the pieces to the twelve tribes as a call to war.

3. The National / Tribal Response

  • Sodom: God Himself judges the city directly. No human army is needed.
  • Gibeah: Israel gathers “as one man” (Judg 20:1, 11) to demand justice. When Benjamin refuses to hand over the perpetrators, civil war breaks out. On the third day of battle, Israel nearly wipes out the entire tribe of Benjamin (25,100 dead, only 600 survivors).

4. The Moral Point the Text Makes

The author of Judges uses the Sodom parallel to deliver a devastating indictment: “The sin that destroyed Sodom has now taken root inside Israel.”

  • In Sodom, the wickedness was among pagans.
  • In Gibeah, the wickedness is among the Israelites — in the territory of Benjamin, one of the twelve tribes.

This is why the story is so shocking. The phrase “no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in his own eyes” (Judg 21:25) frames the entire section. Gibeah shows what happens when there is no central moral authority: even the chosen people can become as wicked as Sodom.

5. Key Differences

  • Sodom is destroyed by divine fire; Gibeah is destroyed by civil war.
  • Sodom’s sin is directed at angelic visitors; Gibeah’s sin is directed at a fellow Israelite’s concubine.
  • Sodom ends with total annihilation; Gibeah ends with near-annihilation of Benjamin, followed by desperate measures to preserve the tribe (Judg 21).

6. Warren Gage’s Interpretation vs. the Text

Gage sees the concubine’s body divided among the twelve tribes as a type of Jesus giving his body to the twelve disciples, and the judgment on “new Sodom” (Gibeah) as foreshadowing Christ’s victory over “spiritual Sodom” (Rev 11:8).

The Tanakh itself makes no such connection. The story is a moral warning about internal corruption and the danger of anarchy. The “third day” is simply the day Israel wins the battle through ambush — not a resurrection motif. Jewish tradition views this chapter as one of the darkest in the period of the Judges, illustrating what happens when “there is no king” (i.e., no righteous leadership or centralized Torah observance).

Summary Table

AspectSodom (Gen 19)Gibeah (Judg 19–20)
SinGang rape of male visitorsGang rape and murder of Levite’s concubine
Host’s OfferTwo virgin daughtersVirgin daughter + concubine
Response of MobRefuse women, demand menRefuse women, take concubine
JudgmentDivine fire and brimstoneCivil war, near-genocide of Benjamin
“Third Day”Not presentDay of decisive victory for Israel
Moral LessonPagan wickednessWickedness inside Israel

The parallel is deliberate and painful: the evil that destroyed Sodom had now infected God’s own people. The story is not about foreshadowing a Messiah’s resurrection. It is about the urgent need for moral leadership and justice within Israel.

This fits the pattern we’ve seen in Gage’s milestones: a surface-level numerical or thematic match (“third day,” “Sodom”) is turned into christological typology, while the Tanakh’s own voice emphasizes moral failure and the consequences of anarchy.

Torah Truth: The Tree Of Life

The Tree of Life: Why Christianity Should Not Exist Chapter: The Real Sin of Sodom and the Path Back to the Tree of Life

There is a profound Jewish teaching that reveals the biggest difference between the Torah’s worldview and the Christian narrative of sin and redemption.

It begins in the Garden of Eden.

When Adam and Eve are banished, God stations cherubim with a flaming sword that turns every way (mitahapechet) to guard the path to the Tree of Life (Genesis 3:24). The Torah does not say the Tree of Life was destroyed. It says the path to it was guarded. That path was never removed — it was protected.

Rabbi David Fohrman points out that the Torah deliberately echoes this same language in the story of Sodom (Parashat Vayera). The destruction of Sodom contains eight precise parallels to the banishment from Eden:

  • Sending out a hand (shalach yad) to grab something
  • Being sent out of one’s home
  • The word mikedem (from the east)
  • A garden-like setting
  • Angels
  • Divine fire
  • The verb mitahapechet (turned over / reversed)
  • And the eighth: guarding “the path” (derech) — in Eden to the Tree of Life, in Sodom to “the path of God, to do righteousness and justice” (tzedakah u’mishpat).

The Torah is telling us something powerful: Sodom is what happens when a society loses the path to the Tree of Life.

Sodom Has Rules

Sodom had rules. It had order. It had justice (mishpat). But it had no tzedakah — no compassion, no care for the stranger, no regard for the vulnerable. They institutionalized evil. Their “justice” was to rape and rob guests so no outsiders would enter their paradise. When a society loses the balance between justice and kindness, it becomes Sodom — and it must be destroyed.

The path to the Tree of Life is not a yellow brick road. It is the lifelong conversation with God about how to live tzedakah u’mishpat — doing what is right and what is just, even when they are in tension.

Christianity tells a different story.

The Tree Of Life

It says Adam and Eve ate from the Tree of Knowledge and brought sin and death into the world. Because of that original sin, humanity is fallen and needs a savior. Jesus dies to pay the penalty, and through faith in him we regain access to eternal life — the Tree of Life.

But the Torah never says Adam’s sin doomed all humanity to spiritual death. It never says we lost the Tree of Life forever. It says the path to it was guarded. And Proverbs 3:18 tells us exactly where that path is:

“She [the Torah] is a Tree of Life to those who grasp her, and whoever holds onto her is happy.”

The Tree of Life was never taken away. It was given to us at Sinai. Every time we study Torah, struggle with its commandments, and try to live tzedakah u’mishpat, we are walking the guarded path back to the Tree of Life.

Adam and Eve were not commanded to stay away from the Tree of Life forever. They were given a choice — and they chose knowledge over life. But God did not abandon them to eternal death. He gave them clothing, He gave them children, and ultimately He gave their descendants the Torah — the true Tree of Life.

There Was No Debt

Christianity’s need for Jesus as the solution to original sin only makes sense if you accept that Adam’s sin created a debt that no human being can repay. The Torah does not teach that. It teaches that we are not fallen beyond repair. We are distant, but the path is still open. Every generation can choose to walk it.

That is why Judaism does not need a savior who dies for our sins. We already have the antidote. It is in our hands every time we open the Torah.

The real sin of Sodom was not just sexual violence. It was the complete loss of tzedakah — the refusal to care for the stranger, the vulnerable, the guest. When a society institutionalizes cruelty and calls it justice, it destroys itself.

The path back is still there. It is the path of Torah. It is the path of doing what is right and what is just.

And that path leads to the Tree of Life.

Call to Action: If this teaching resonates with you, subscribe for more explorations of the Torah’s deepest lessons. What part of the Eden or Sodom story has stayed with you the most? Share in the comments.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

The Blueprint Was Never MissingThe Blueprint Was Never Missing: Challenging Bart Ehrman on Evolution, Religion, and the Ancient CodeThe Blueprint Was Never Missing

The Blueprint Was Never Missing: Challenging Bart Ehrman on Evolution, Religion, and the Ancient Code
The Blueprint Was Never Missing: Challenging Bart Ehrman on Evolution, Religion, and the Ancient Code

Bart Ehrman, one of the world’s best-known New Testament scholars, argues that basic human morality and cooperation are simply hard-wired into us through evolution. In his view, we don’t need religion to explain why people generally try to get along. On the surface, it sounds reasonable. But when we look at the full evidence — from ancient archaeology to genetics, language, and the Torah — a very different picture emerges.

The code was never missing. A precise spiritual and mathematical blueprint has existed from the very beginning of human civilization. This code was not invented by the Jewish people — it was preserved by them for the benefit of all humanity.

Ancient Sites Show the Code Was Already Active

Long before Moses received the Torah at Sinai, humanity was already encoding sophisticated knowledge. At Göbekli Tepe in Turkey, built more than 11,600 years ago, Pillar 43 encodes specific constellations exactly as they appeared around 10,950 BCE. This is not primitive art — it is precise astronomical knowledge.

Even more striking are the underwater megalithic ruins at Lake Van in Turkey. Divers have found massive precision-cut stones, some featuring the Flower of Life pattern, lying 75–85 feet underwater. These structures show engineering skill far beyond what mainstream archaeology currently attributes to that period.

These sites demonstrate that early humans were not merely surviving and cooperating, as Ehrman suggests. They were actively working with a higher cosmic order.

The Code Appears in Our DNA

Modern science is catching up to this ancient intelligence. Epigenetics has proven that protective instincts and traumatic experiences can be passed down through generations in our DNA. Abraham was promised two great lines — Isaac and Ishmael —, and both were promised kingdoms and numerous descendants.

Genetic studies show shared ancient Middle Eastern markers connecting Jewish priestly families with Arab populations. My own family’s Big Y test shows the Cohen Modal Haplotype in haplogroup J, tracing directly to the ancient Levant and shared with Hashemite and Saudi royal lines that descend from Ishmael. This genetic connection is exactly what we would expect from Abraham’s two promised lines.

The Torah Begins as a Universal Book

Rabbi David Fohrman, in his series A Book Like No Other, asks a simple but powerful question: Why does the Torah begin with the creation of the universe instead of starting with “I am the Lord your God who brought you out of Egypt”?

His answer is profound. The Torah does not begin as a book written only for the Jewish people. It begins as a universal Owner’s Manual for all humanity. By opening with “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth,” the Torah declares that this is the operating system of the entire world. Only later does it narrow its focus to one family — Abraham’s — to safeguard that blueprint so that one day it can be restored to all nations.

Hebrew as a Language of Creation

The precision continues in the Hebrew language itself. Efraim Palvanov has shown that Hebrew functions like a chemical language — the precise pronunciation and vowel points actually affect the nature of what is being created. The very first word of Genesis, Bereisheet, contains all 613 commandments of the Torah in seed form.

Even Pirkei Avot 5:7, the seven characteristics of a wise person, is interpreted by Rabbi Akiva Tatz as describing the actual operating system of reality — speaking in proper order, not interrupting, admitting when we don’t know, and acknowledging truth.

Monotheism and Historical Questions

Both Judaism and Islam have consistently maintained absolute monotheism — God is One with no partner, no son, and no Trinity. This stands in contrast to Christianity’s doctrine of the Trinity. Tovia Singer has often pointed out that on this central issue, Judaism and Islam have more in common with each other than either does with Christianity.

Researcher Jay Smith has highlighted that coins minted by Arab rulers between 640 and 680 CE — the very period when Islam is said to have emerged — still prominently featured Christian crosses and Latin Christian inscriptions. The Dome of the Rock, completed in 691 CE, contains Arabic inscriptions that explicitly reject the Christian doctrine that “God has a son.”

Patterns Of Evidence

These physical artifacts raise honest historical questions about how the official narratives of both Christianity and Islam developed over time.

Creator: AICF

Our prophets foretold that in the end of days the good side of both Esau and Ishmael would return. We are seeing hints of this today as some Arab nations move away from confrontation and toward cooperation with Israel.

The Pattern of Redemption

In his lecture on Shir HaMa’alot (Psalm 126), Rabbi Fohrman explains a striking pattern. When redemption begins, the Jewish people may first be “like dreamers,” still numb from centuries of trauma. It is the nations that first declare, “God has done great things with these people.” Only after hearing this recognition from the outside world do the Jewish people fully awaken to the reality.

One major prophecy has not yet been fulfilled — the unique judgment described in Zechariah 12 and 14. In that moment, with no room left for doubt, the identity of the Messiah will become clear to the entire world.

Adam the Blueprint of Creation and the Tree of Life.
Adam: The Blueprint of Creation and the Tree of Life.

One Family, One Tree of Life

My hope is not to condemn any faith, but to invite honest reflection. The evidence — from ancient megaliths to our DNA, from the structure of the Torah to the shifts we see among nations — challenges all of us to examine whether our long-held beliefs fully align with the original code given to all humanity.

We are truly one family sharing one Tree of Life. The Torah is the only place in the Bible where God explicitly states that eating from this Tree brings eternal life. The blueprint was never missing. It was protected for thousands of years so that in the end, all of Abraham’s children could return to it together.

The Tree of Life is waiting. The family is beginning to return. And that may be the clearest evidence of all that the Bible is true.

Footnotes

¹ Martin Sweatman, Prehistory Decoded (2021) — analysis of Göbekli Tepe Pillar 43 and its astronomical alignments.

² Family Tree DNA Big Y results and studies on the Cohen Modal Haplotype in haplogroup J, showing shared Levantine ancestry between Jewish priestly lines and certain Arab royal lines.

³ Rabbi David Fohrman, “A Book Like No Other” lecture series.

⁴ Efraim Palvanov, research on Hebrew functioning as a chemical language and the seed form of the commandments in Bereisheet.

⁵ Rabbi Akiva Tatz, lectures on Pirkei Avot 5:7 and the structure of creation.

⁶ Jay Smith, research on 7th-century Arab coins featuring Christian crosses and the inscriptions on the Dome of the Rock (691 CE).

⁷ Genesis 3:22.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

The Double Priestly Flame: J-FT235823 Cohen DNA, Crypto-Jewish Survival, From 550 BCE Judea to the Ranches of Amarillo, Texas

Family DNA History: Cohen Priests on Both Sides – Halevi-Lucero & Diaz-Ramirez Crypto-Jew Legacy from Jerusalem to Amarillo

My name is Archie Lee Hunnicutt, Jr., and this essay is my family’s living heartbeat. It is more than names on a tree or old stories from the rancho. It is the record of a priestly light that has burned for thousands of years—carried through expulsion, hidden in adobe walls, whispered in Ladino, and now flickering openly in the ranches and railroad blocks of Amarillo, Texas.

I write it in the shadow of my mother Lorena Maria Diaz Honeycutt’s passing on April 6, 2026. She is the one who finally told me at age thirty-five that we were Jewish: Friday candles lit in secret, no pork in the house, the unknown language she heard as a child hiding under the floorboards, and the rigorous spring cleaning that required everything in the house to be scrubbed before Shabbat.

The Jewish people, as historian Francisco Gil-White has powerfully argued, represent the most successful system ever created for changing humanity. Gil-White traces how monotheism, ethical codes of justice, equality, and compassion originated in ancient Israel and gradually reshaped the world. Unlike the tyrannical empires of the ancient Near East that crushed the weak, the “Semitic way” placed structural concern for the vulnerable—the widow, the orphan, the stranger—at the center of society.

Kings were not above the law; the Torah demanded that they protect the lowest in society. This radical ethic seeped into Greco-Roman thought, Christianity, the Enlightenment, and modern human rights. Antisemitism, Gil-White explains, is not random hatred but a backlash by ruling elites against this liberationist impulse.

The Jewish people survived scattered and persecuted while their ideas—individual liberty, rule of law, collective responsibility—remade civilization. No other ancient tribe achieved this combination of endurance and universal moral influence. Deuteronomy’s promise holds: nations that blessed Israel were blessed; those that cursed it crumbled. This system survives in our blood—on both sides of my family.

The DNA evidence is clear and undeniable. My uncle Joseph Diaz’s Big Y-700 test through FamilyTreeDNA returned J-FT235823, a precise subclade nested squarely inside the Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH) under J-Z18271, with a shared priestly ancestor around 700 BCE in the late First Temple period of ancient Judea.¹ FamilyTreeDNA’s Discover tool lists “The Jewish priesthood (Kohanim) lineage” as the primary notable connection for this branch.²

Scientific papers published in Nature in 1997 and 1998 demonstrated that a high percentage of Jewish men who shared an oral tradition of being Cohanim also shared this distinctive Y-chromosome signature. The authors named the highest-frequency haplotype the Cohen Modal Haplotype. These findings were confirmed in additional studies, including a 2009 paper and the 2017 Behar study on Ashkenazi Levites.³

But our family’s story is extraordinary: the Cohen priestly lineage appears on both sides. On my grandmother Catalina Almanzar’s Halevi-Lucero side, we carry oral and genetic hints of Levite heritage—temple assistants and close kin to the Cohanim.

The surname Halevi itself is the Hebrew honorific for a Levite, and the Lucero line (“light”) has long been associated with crypto-Jewish families who hid their faith after the 1492 Spanish expulsion. On my grandfather Luz Ramirez Diaz’s Diaz-Ramirez side from Nuevo León, the same J1 priestly markers surface through secret traditions. Both paternal lines converge on the same ancient Semitic root, proving we are a priestly family twice over.

This double Cohen inheritance is rare and powerful. FamilyTreeDNA’s Notable Connections page for J-FT235823 links our line to the Jewish priesthood and to figures such as Bennett Greenspan (founder of FamilyTreeDNA), the Hashemite Jordanian Royal Family, the House of Saud, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, the Katzenellenbogen rabbinic lineage, the Rothschild family, and even distant cultural kin like Vincent van Gogh and Noah Webster.⁴

Ancient Connections further confirm our path: we share a paternal ancestor with Goldenen Stiege 69, an individual who lived between 600 and 800 CE during the Late Avar Age in what is now Lower Austria and was associated with the Avar cultural group. Only 1 in 383 customers shares this specific ancient connection.⁵ The same genetic thread that once blessed worshippers in the Temple in Jerusalem has traveled through empires, inquisitions, and migrations, reaching the ranches of Amarillo.

I discovered this heritage gradually through my mother’s and uncle’s stories. As a boy, I heard the strange language—Ladino—spoken in whispers under the floorboards. I saw the Friday candles lit in secret. I watched the exhaustive spring cleaning that turned the entire rancho upside down before certain holy days. My uncle’s quiet insistence on burial within twenty-four hours was a halakhic custom he never named. These were not random quirks. They were the hidden practices of crypto-Jews who survived the Inquisition by blending into Catholic society while preserving the light.

Ancient Roots: The Levantine Cradle and the CMH

The story begins in the ancient Near East. FamilyTreeDNA’s Discover tool places our paternal line at J-YSC0000234, formed around 3350 BCE in the Levant.⁶ This deep J1 branch later splits into the Cohen Modal Haplotype cluster. Scientific studies by Skorecki, Hammer, Behar, and others have repeatedly shown that men carrying the CMH are overwhelmingly likely to belong to Jewish priestly lineages descending from Aaron.⁷ On my grandmother’s Halevi-Lucero side, the Levite connection is equally strong. Levites served alongside Cohanim in the Temple, and many crypto-Jewish families in New Mexico carried both traditions in secret.

Sephardic historians document how these priestly lines persisted through Mexico, Texas, Colorado, and New Mexico. Patricia Sanchez Rau, a leading New Mexico genealogist, has traced numerous Hispano families to converso origins, showing that surnames such as Lucero, Vigil, and Almanzar recur in crypto-Jewish networks. Henrietta Martinez Christmas, in her extensive work on New Mexican Sephardic roots, highlights how families fleeing the 1492 expulsion settled in the mining regions of Nuevo León and later moved north during the Spanish colonial expansion.

Dell Sanchez, author of works on Sephardic crypto-Judaism in the Americas, emphasizes that thousands of converso families built the infrastructure of northern Mexico and the American Southwest while practicing Judaism in secret. Dennis Otero, a professor and genealogist whose research aligns with these historians, has mapped Lucero-Vigil lines to early colonial settlers who carried Levite markers. Together, these scholars demonstrate that priestly lineages were not anomalies but foundational to the settlement of Mexico and the borderlands.⁸

Grandma’s Halevi-Lucero Line: Levite Priests Who Helped Build New Mexico

The Halevi-Lucero branch begins with early New Mexico settlers who arrived during the Reconquest after the 1680 Pueblo Revolt. Sebastian Rodriguez de Salazar (born 1582 in Cartaya, Andalucía) married Luisa Díaz de Betanzos in Mexico City in 1607 and, by 1618, was serving as a soldier and letter carrier in Santa Fe.⁹ His wife’s Díaz surname is a classic crypto-Jewish marker.

Their descendants include Francisco de Salazar Hachero (born 1610), who became Procurator General and was elected to Santa Fe’s council in 1641 before being executed in 1642 for opposing tyranny.¹⁰ The line continues through Bartolomé Antonio de Salazar, alcalde mayor of the Zuñi and Hopi jurisdictions, and Francisco Montes Vigil I (born 1665 in Zacatecas), who joined the 1695 Reconquest expedition, fought in the Moqui campaign, and survived the Villasur massacre of 1720.¹¹

Domingo Montes Vigil (born 1693) became alcalde mayor of Santa Cruz de la Cañada and married into the Salazar line.¹² His descendant, Juan Baptista Montes Vigil (born ~1721), married María Francisca López, a Lucero widow, bridging to the Lucero surname that runs through my grandmother.¹³ Joseph Ygnacio Vigil (baptized 1759) and Antonio Alexandro Vigil López (born 1783) produced María Narcisa Vigil (born 1832), who married Francisco “Franco” Almanzar in 1848.¹⁴ Their daughter Catalina Almanzar (born 1899 in Fort Sumner) married Frank Jimenez and later my grandfather, Luz Diaz, uniting the Halevi-Lucero and Diaz-Ramirez lines in Amarillo.

These ancestors were not passive settlers. They built the governance, military, and agricultural foundations of New Mexico. Alcaldes mayores administered justice, soldiers protected the frontier, and families like the Luceros and Vigils established the adobe communities that still stand today. Sephardic historians note that many such families carried hidden priestly traditions—secret candle lighting, rigorous cleaning rituals, and Ladino phrases—while outwardly participating in Catholic society. My mother’s stories of the rancho match these patterns exactly.

Grandpa’s Diaz-Ramirez Line: Crypto-Jew Traditions That Built Northern Mexico

My grandfather, Luz Ramirez Diaz, came from Nuevo León, Old Mexico. The Diaz and Ramirez surnames are common among crypto-Jewish families who fled the Inquisition and settled in the mining regions of Jalisco, Durango, and Nuevo León.¹⁵ Grandpa’s deathbed request for burial within twenty-four hours was a clear halakhic custom. His name, “Luz” (light), echoes the symbolic language used by crypto-Jews who called themselves “people of the light.”

The line traces through Ynocencio Diaz Lopez (1869–1937, born in Teocuitatlán de Corona, Jalisco), son of Timoteo Diaz (1850–1910) and Juana Lopez.¹⁶ Earlier ancestors include Ignacio/Ygnacio Diaz Gonzalez (1803–1893) and Jose Diaz (born ~1783 in Jalisco).¹⁷ Sostenes Ramirez (1895–1958, born in San Francisco, Mezquital, Durango) married into the family, bringing further crypto-Jewish networks from Durango mining towns.¹⁸ These families helped build Mexico’s northern frontier—working mines, establishing ranches, and later moving into railroad labor in New Mexico and Texas.

DNA studies of Nuevo León and South Texas Hispanic men frequently show J1 signatures with Middle Eastern origins—exactly the priestly pattern seen on my uncle’s test.¹⁹ Historians like Dell Sanchez document how converso families from Spain and Portugal settled these regions in the 1500s, contributing to the economic and cultural foundation of colonial Mexico while preserving secret rituals.

The Great Migration to Amarillo and the Modern Family

The family moved to Amarillo in the late 1930s for railroad jobs and new opportunities. Catalina Almanzar raised her children here, including my mother, Lorena. Grandpa Luz brought his Nuevo León traditions. The rancho became the place where the light was kept alive in secret.

Our extended family tree reflects this dual priestly heritage. On the Jimenez side (maternal half-siblings through Catalina Almanzar and Frank Jimenez), we have uncles like Hilario “Lalo” Jimenez (1921–2005), Gregorio “Lolo” Jose Jimenez (1924–1965), and others whose descendants include Debra Clay and numerous grandchildren.

On the Diaz-Ramirez side, my grandfather Luz and great-grandfather Ynocencio produced uncles such as Marcelino Diaz (1916–1974), Margarito Ramirez Diaz (1918–1994, buried Llano Cemetery), Miguel “Mike” Diaz (1918–2003), Inocencio Diaz (1922–1980), Maria Diaz (1926–1996), and Raymond Diaz (1930–1975). Their children and grandchildren spread across New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, and California, carrying the same light.

Recent Losses and the Enduring Light

In the spring of 2026, we suffered fresh wounds. Larry Junior Jimenez, only 44, was killed in Amarillo while rushing to protect his family during a shooting. Three young Lucero children from the Eva Jimenez line perished in an Austin apartment fire. These tragedies remind us that the protective instinct of our priestly line—stepping forward for others—continues.

Dedication and Call to Cousins

To every Jimenez, Lucero, Vigil, Almanzar, Diaz, and Ramirez cousin: this history is yours. The DNA proves it. The Cohen priestly marker runs on both sides. The crypto-Jewish traditions, the hidden light, the survival—all of it is yours. Historians such as Patricia Sanchez Rau, Henrietta Martinez Christmas, and Dell Sanchez have shown how priestly lines shaped Mexico and the Southwest. We honor our forefathers by remembering.

From 3350 BCE wanderers in the Levant to the ranches of Amarillo, through inquisitions, revolts, fires, and bullets, our family has carried the priestly fire on both sides. Halevi-Lucero Levites and Diaz-Ramirez Cohanim—two streams from the same ancient source. We have lost much, but we have not lost the light.

Mom, this is for you. Your rancho stories, your unknown tongue, your quiet strength—they led us here. The candles you lit in secret now burn openly in this record.

We are still here. The light still burns.

Family Tree Diagram (Text-Based Ancestry Template)

Paternal Diaz-Ramirez Cohen Line (J-FT235823 / CMH) ~3350 BCE Levant (J-YSC0000234) → 700 BCE Cohen ancestor (J-Z18271) → Goldenen Stiege 69 (600–800 CE, Austria) → … → Jose Bacilio Diaz (5th great-grandfather) → Jose Diaz (~1783, Jalisco) → Ignacio/Ygnacio Diaz Gonzalez (1803–1893) → Timoteo Diaz (1850–1910) → Ynocencio Diaz Lopez (1869–1937, Teocuitatlán) + Sostenes Ramirez (1895–1958, Durango) → Luz Ramirez Diaz (1914–1988) + Catalina Almanzar → Lorena Maria Diaz Honeycutt (1938–2026) + Archie Lee Honeycutt Sr. (1936–1991) Children of Luz & Catalina: Gilbert Diaz (1931–2012), Joseph Diaz, Benjamin Diaz, Margret Diaz (living), Lorena (mother) Great-uncles (children of Ynocencio & Sostenes): Marcelino Diaz (1916–1974), Margarito R. Diaz (1918–1994), Miguel “Mike” Diaz (1918–2003), Inocencio Diaz (1922–1980), Maria Diaz (1926–1996), Raymond Diaz (1930–1975), Juanita/Juana Diaz (1912–1944) + Fred Martinez → Mary Martinez/Paredes (living, Amarillo) Descendants include numerous grandchildren/great-grandchildren across TX, NM, CO, CA (full lists available in Ancestry tree 75300354).

Maternal Halevi-Lucero Levite Line ~1770s Taos/Santa Fe colonial settlers → Pablo Antonio Lucero (1774–1836) + Juana Paula Larranaga Mestas → Jose Tomas Lucero (1806–1880) → Juan Nepomuceno Lucero (1874–1940) + Delfina Lucero → Catalina “Catarina” Lucero Almanzar (1899–1973) + Frank Jimenes (1892–1929) / Luz Diaz Jimenez half-siblings: Francisco Jimenez (1919–1978), Hilario “Lalo” Jimenez (1921–2005), Lolo J. Jimenez (1924–1965), others (Elain, Eva, etc.) Lucero-Vigil connections documented by historians link to Abraham HaLevi (Spain) and early colonial Reconquest families (Salazar, Montes Vigil, etc.).

Combined Modern Descendants (Living Survivors of Lorena) Children: Catalina Marie Lindsey (deceased), Larry Lindsey (deceased), Eddie Ramirez, Archie Honeycutt Jr. (user), Jimmy Honeycutt, Anthony Parker (adopted) Spouses & grandchildren/great-grandchildren: Catalina had Tomica Lindsey, Barry Knox, Candace Willis, Sir Thomas Gaither, Thomasina Indoco (and their children); Larry had Candace & Esau Lindsey (and children); Eddie has Gabriela Imani, Eddie Jr.; Archie & Lisa have Chesley Lucero (husband John), Amanda Malone (husband Carnell), Cameron Vaughn (husband Haywood), Elishaeva; Jimmy & Beverly have Kenneth, Haley, Allie; Anthony & Krystal have Michael, Isaiah. The total number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren exceeds 30 across branches (exact counts in family records).

This blog is my family’s living heartbeat. Our Jewish survival and the Semitic revolution from Ezra and Nehemiah to Amarillo. It is more than names on a tree or faded stories from the rancho.

It is the record of a priestly light that has burned for thousands of years. This light was carried through expulsion. It was hidden in adobe walls and whispered in Ladino. Now, it flickers openly in the ranches and streets of Amarillo, Texas.

I write these words while my mother rests in hospice, her breath growing quieter each day. She is the bridge who finally told me, at age thirty-five, that we were Jewish.

She spoke of Friday candles lit in secret. She described the strange, unknown language she overheard as a child while hiding under the floorboards. The intense spring cleaning consumed the household: every floor was scrubbed, every wall wiped. Every corner was swept and polished until the entire rancho house gleamed before Passover.

These were not random customs. They were the quiet transmission of a priestly heritage that refused to die.

Fort Sumner Catalina Almanzar Lucero

This post is for her, for the cousins I have never met, and for the ones we lost too soon. My mother’s sister’s grandson, Larry Junior Jimenez and Virgil Lee Thompson III, was murdered in Amarillo on March 22, 2026. while running toward gunfire to protect his family. Only the heart of a priest warrior would run into trouble with only his love for his family. Here is the blessing our grandfather Jacob gave us,

“Simeon and Levi are brothers—
    their swords[a] are weapons of violence.
Let me not enter their council,
    let me not join their assembly,
for they have killed men in their anger
    and hamstrung oxen as they pleased.
Cursed be their anger, so fierce,
    and their fury, so cruel!
I will scatter them in Jacob
    and disperse them in Israel.

Levi The Priest of Israel

Only eleven days earlier, on March 11, 2026, a tragedy occurred. Three young children from the Eva Jimenez line — Anyah Lucero (10), Athena Lucero (7), and Jeremy Jr. Lucero (5) — perished in a tragic apartment fire in Austin, Texas. Their mother remains in critical condition. These losses cut deep. They are not distant statistics; they are ours.

Felis Almansar (likely Felix Almanzar—common spelling shift in old records) was born around 1811 in San Antonio. At that time, it was known as the Provincia de Texas, New Spain. It was still under Spanish/Mexican rule pre-Texas independence. Alive past 1870, so he made it through Mexican rule, the Texas Revolution, the Republic era, and US annexation—tough frontier times.

From Ancestry trees: Born around 1805–1811 in “Province San Antonio Vejar” (Bexar County area). The parents were Eulogio Almansan (or Almansar) and Josefa Franca. Married Maria Lorenza Baca—Baca’s a big NM/Texas settler name, often crypto-Jew tied (hidden Jewish roots from Spain). They had four kids (no names in summaries, but likely sons/daughters blending into San Antonio families).

Surname Almansar/Almanzar? Spanish topographic—Arabic “al-manẓar” for “lookout point” or “watchtower,” from Almansa (Albacete, Castile). Mozarabic/Andalucía roots—prime converso territory (post-1492 expulsion, many hid as Catholics). In Texas? Common in Bexar/San Antonio Hispanic lines, some with crypto whispers (like Vigil, Lucero, Diaz—your grandma’s chain).

Antonio Alexandro Vigil López (or Antonio Alejandro Vigil)—was born on 21 February 1783. He was baptized the same day in Santa Cruz de la Cañada church. The Lucero maternal line is your grandma’s. Joseph Ygnacio Vigil (the 1759 baptizee we just covered) is his son. His mother is María Ana Cayetana López (married 1781).

From Ancestry/FamilySearch hits: he married María Dolores Olivas (or Olivas y something—common NM blend), had kids like María Juana Vigil (b. 1816, married Pacheco), maybe more (Loreto de Jesús later echoes). Death? Some trees say 15 August 1881 in Tome, Valencia County—super old, 98 years—but that’s unconfirmed; others just “deceased” after the 1830s. Lived in Rio Arriba/Santa Cruz valley—rancher/farmer life, big family like dad.

Ties: Vigil (paternal) + López (maternal)—López is huge in Santa Cruz crypto-Jew webs (often hidden Jewish surnames). No direct proof for Alexandro, but the chain (Francisco founder → Domingo alcalde → Juan Baptista → Joseph Ygnacio → Alexandro) keeps stacking: Andalucía/Zacatecas roots, Inquisition shadows, hidden Sabbaths. From 1783 baptism → Cañada dirt → your Amarillo ranches.

Francisco “Franco” Almanzar—born in April 1830 in San Miguel, New Mexico. This was still frontier territory then. He died on 1 November 1889 in Las Vegas, San Miguel County. He belongs to your grandma’s Lucero maternal line again. He is the son of Felis Almansar (that 1811 San Antonio guy we covered). María Lorenza Baca (or close kin; trees vary) is likely his mother.

From FamilySearch/Ancestry: Married María Narcisa Vigil (b. ~1835–1840, Vigil surname—direct tie to your Vigil chain: Domingo alcalde → Juan Baptista → Joseph Ygnacio → Narcisa’s branch?). They had kids like Jose Dolores Almanzar (b. 1854, San Jose, San Miguel—married María Uucaria, big family), María Juana Almansar (b. 1851), maybe more (Loreto, Tomas). 1870 census: Franco in San Miguel County, farmer/laborer, household with Lorenza (wife?)—age 40, NM-born, Hispanic roots. No occupation listed beyond settler life.

María Narcisa Vigil (Maria Narcissa Vigil) was born on 2 October 1832. This event took place in Santa Cruz de la Cañada, Santa Fe County. She was baptized on 30 October that same year. She was the daughter of… well, trees point to Juan Cristóbal Vigil (b. ~1800s, from Domingo’s line) and María Antonia López or close kin—your Vigil chain keeps looping back.

She married Francisco “Franco” Almanzar on 2 October 1848 in Las Vegas or the San Miguel area (right at 16—common then). They settled in San Miguel/Las Vegas: a farmer/laborer, a homemaker, and kids like Jose Dolores (1854), María Juana (1851)—a big NM Hispanic family. 1870 census: Franco household, Narcisa ~38, kids around. She outlived him—died 1900 in Las Vegas, buried in a local Catholic spot (San Miguel Mission? records fuzzy).

Vigil surname? From your Montes Vigil founders (Francisco 1665 → Domingo → Juan Baptista → her branch)—Andalucía/Zacatecas roots, crypto-Jew whispers everywhere. NM Vigil lines? Often tied to Charlemagne’s descent (fun myth), but real: converso blends, secret customs (Friday lights, no pork). Almanzar’s wife? Watchtower Arabic echo—perfect hidden-Jew fit.

From 1832, Santa Cruz baptism → Las Vegas widow → your Amarillo ranches. Blog it: “Narcisa—Vigil girl, Almanzar bride—bridged Cañada to Vegas. Mom’s light? From her baptismal font to Texas dirt.”

Delfina Muniz Lucero was born on 26 June 1879 in New Mexico. She came from a family cluster in San Miguel County. She was the daughter of Manuel Lucero, who was born in 1853, and Epunusena Muniz, the 1840 mom. She died 13 January 1956 in Amarillo, Potter County, Texas—age 76, right after your grandma Catalina’s time there.

FamilySearch nails the basics: she had siblings like Juan Muniz Lucero, Valentino, and Margarito—a big brood in Sabinoso/San Miguel. No husband named in public trees (maybe widowed or remarried—Lucero surname sticks), but kids? At least a few Muniz-Lucero blends, tying straight to your line: from frontier adobe farms → Amarillo ranches. No obit pops (1956 papers sparse online), but death in Amarillo fits the migration—railroad, jobs, family pull like Catalina’s.

Crypto-Jew whispers? Muniz/Lucero surnames—Andalucía roots, hidden in NM Hispanic webs (Vigil, Almanzar, Diaz). She lived through statehood, the Depression, and WWII—tough pioneer woman.

Delfina Muniz Lucero had a big family. She had nine siblings in total. FamilySearch trees show this for her brother, Margarito, who was born in 1875 in Sabinoso. Parents: Manuel Lucero (b. ~1853) and Epunusena Muniz (b. ~1840, name might be Epifania variant).

  • Margarito Muniz Lucero (22 July 1875–1963, Sabinoso birth, died Clayton, NM—lived long, probably farmer/rancher).
  • Eusebia Muniz Lucero (earlier one, maybe 1870s—shows as first listed).
  • Delfina herself (26 June 1879–13 Jan 1956, Amarillo).
  • At least six more unnamed in summaries—likely brothers/sisters born 1870s–1880s in San Miguel/Sabinoso area. Census hints big households: kids like Juan, Valentino, others blending Lucero/Muniz.

This blog reaches out to every cousin of Jimenez, Lucero, Vigil, Almanzar, Diaz, and Ramirez. It welcomes you no matter where life has scattered you. If you carry any of these names or recognize the rancho stories, you belong here. Come home to the story.

Heroes and Priests of Amarillo

Jimenez History

What elevates our family’s personal saga to something far larger is the powerful analysis of anthropologist Francisco Gil-White. He describes the Jewish people as the most successful system ever created for changing humanity.

Gil-White traces a radical “Semitic way.” It was born in the ancient Near East and crystallized through the Jewish ethical revolution. This way protected the vulnerable, rejected tyranny, and tended toward individual liberty. It also promoted the rule of law and justice for the widow, the orphan, and the stranger.

Unlike empires that built power by crushing the weak, the Torah made compassion and equality structural. “Love your neighbor as yourself” was not a mere sentiment. It rested on the radical idea that all humans are equal in the eyes of one God. Kings were bound by the same laws that shielded the bottom of society.

Semitic Families Survive

This Semitic current flowed from Jewish monotheism and ethics into Christianity, the Enlightenment, and modern human rights. Nations that encountered Israel’s laws, as Deuteronomy foretold, often saw something wise and desirable. Those who blessed this system were blessed; those who cursed it eventually crumbled.

Gil-White argues that antisemitism is not random hatred but a recurring elite strategy to suppress this liberationist spark. Yet the Jewish nation survived — scattered, persecuted, yet culturally intact — while its ideas reshaped the world.

No other ancient people achieved this combination of endurance and universal ethical influence. This is the living system that flows in our blood on both sides of the family. Our double priestly inheritance is concrete evidence that the Semitic flame still burns.

The DNA Proves Who We Are

The DNA evidence is clear, scientific, and undeniable. My uncle (my grandfather’s direct paternal line) took the Big Y-700 test through FamilyTreeDNA. The result returned J-FT235823, a subclade that branched off from its parent J-Z18290 around 550 BCE in the ancient Levant.

This places the defining mutation of our specific line in the late First Temple period. It situates it right at the heart of biblical Jewish history in Judea. On his dashboard, this lineage proudly displays the official Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH) Badge. This badge is earned when the first 12 Y-STR markers match. Alternatively, they fall within the allowed 3-step threshold of the historic Cohen Modal Haplotype profile.

FamilyTreeDNA awards this badge. The badge is based on an updated understanding of the landmark 1997 study. This study was published in Nature by Skorecki and colleagues. That original research showed that a high percentage of Jewish men who carried an oral tradition of being Cohanim. These priests, believed to be descended from Aaron, shared a distinctive Y-chromosome signature. Researchers named the most common haplotype the Cohen Modal Haplotype.

The 1997 study used 6 markers and allowed 1 mutational step. FamilyTreeDNA expanded this to 12 markers. They maintained scientific rigor. It accounted for faster mutation rates on some loci and the original study’s conservative rounding. The CMH is part of the broader J-M267 (J1) haplogroup. This haplogroup is often called “Semitic” or “Mediterranean” due to its distribution. It has deep roots and the greatest diversity in the Fertile Crescent.

Joseph Delfido Ramirez Diaz

Screenshot

Benjamin Cruz Ramirez Diaz

Jiménez- Lucero- Almanzar- Ramírez-Díaz

Follow-up studies (Thomas et al. 1998; Hammer et al. 2009 in Human Genetics) and later refinements, including Behar’s work on Levites, confirmed that roughly half of self-identified Cohanim across Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi communities carry extended versions of this signature.

It is remarkably rare or absent outside Jewish priestly contexts. For those without a Jewish oral tradition, a J1 result often traces back to farming expansions. These expansions occurred during the Neolithic era, originating from the Fertile Crescent around 9,500 years ago.

The CMH badge appears alongside a tradition of hidden Jewish practice in our family. It points strongly to descent from the ancient Israelite priesthood or its close male relatives. About 3% of Jewish men identifying as Yisrael (non-priestly) also carry the CMH. This reflects descent from the broader Levite gene pool.

What makes our story extraordinary is that the Cohen priestly lineage appears on both sides of my family. On my grandmother’s Halevi-Lucero side, we carry strong oral hints of Levite heritage. We also have genetic hints of the temple assistants. They are close kin to the Cohanim. The surname Halevi is the traditional Hebrew designation for a Levite.

The Lucero name (“light”) has long been linked to crypto-Jewish families. These families preserved their faith in secret after the 1492 Spanish expulsion. On my grandfather’s Diaz-Ramirez side from Nuevo León, Old Mexico, the same J1 priestly markers and halakhic customs.

There are deathbed requests for burial within twenty-four hours and whispered Ladino phrases. Finally, there are the same rigorous Friday preparations my mother described. The meals she spent hours preparing for a family gathering.

This double inheritance is rare. Cohen is on the paternal grandfather’s line, now precisely dated to ~550 BCE. Levite-linked is on the grandmother’s side. It explains why our family survived centuries of the Inquisition, expulsions, forced conversions, and assimilation. Despite these challenges, we still produced protectors and light-bearers. The same genetic thread once served in the Temple. Now, it runs through the hidden ranches of New Mexico. It is also found in the modern streets of Amarillo.

FamilyTreeDNA’s Discover tool further illuminates our deep paternal path. The line leading to J-FT235823 emerges from ancient J1 branches formed around 3350 BCE in the Levant. This broad cluster is distantly shared with the Hashemite royal family. It is also shared with the House of Saud, the Wahhabi reformer Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, and other J1 lineages.

The formation of our specific subclade occurred in 550 BCE. This event firmly anchors it in the historical era of the Jewish priesthood’s consolidation. Through this ancient marker, distant connections emerge with scholarly dynasties. These include the Katzenellenbogen rabbis, cultural figures, and other branches of the extended J1 network. These links illustrate how a single priestly thread has woven through empires, scholarship, and revolutions while preserving its ethical core.

Maharam of Padua (c. 1482–1565). Rabbinic Lineage

Ancient Roots: The Levantine Cradle and the CMH

Our story begins in the ancient Near East. Around 3350 BCE, the deep J1 paternal lineage took shape in the Levant. This occurred amid the rise of early civilizations. It coincided with the slow emergence of ethical monotheism. Gil-White identifies this as the cradle of Semitism.

By the First Temple period, the Cohanim were priests descended from Aaron, brother of Moses. They had become a distinct class serving in the Temple. The 550 BCE branching of J-FT235823 from J-Z18290 aligns with the turbulent final decades of the First Temple era. It also aligns with the early Second Temple era. This was a time of exile, return, and reaffirmation of Jewish law and identity.

The Light Of The City of Luz

The CMH badge on my uncle’s test provides confirmation. It shows that our 12-marker profile is close to the modal haplotype first documented in 1997. This is not a coincidence or folklore. Multiple peer-reviewed studies have shown the signature’s strong enrichment among men with priestly oral traditions.

In our case, the genetic data converges beautifully with the family practices my mother and elders recalled. These practices include secretly lighting two candles. The candles were often hidden deep in a cupboard.

They were sometimes placed under a heavy pot so the flame was not seen from outside. There was also the total avoidance of pork and the unfamiliar Ladino phrases spoken by the old ones. Above all, there was the exhaustive spring cleaning.

Every Friday, the rancho house underwent total purification — floors, walls, furniture, every object scrubbed and set right. The home itself became a sanctuary, echoing the biblical call to prepare a holy space for the Sabbath. These were classic crypto-Jewish survivals from Iberian converso communities that fled to the Americas.

Grandma’s Halevi-Lucero Line: Levite Priests in New Mexico Adobe

The Halevi-Lucero branch carries the Levite thread. Levites served alongside Cohanim in the Temple, responsible for music, teaching, and support. Many crypto-Jewish families in northern New Mexico preserved both traditions underground.

The surname Halevi is explicit. Genealogical work by my cousin Dennis Otero connects us to Abraham HaLevi of Spain. He was a Levite who escaped the Inquisition. Through Sephardic lines, it also links us to towering figures. These include Maimonides and Yosef Karo. Yosef Karo is the author of the Shulchan Aruch.

The documented New Mexico line begins with early settlers after the 1680 Pueblo Revolt. Sebastian Rodriguez de Salazar (b. 1582 in Andalucía) married Luisa Díaz de Betanzos — a Díaz surname often marking crypto-Jewish ancestry. Their descendants rose to positions of responsibility in Santa Fe, including acts of conscience that cost lives.

Almanzar The Watch Tower

The line flows through the Montes Vigil and Lucero surnames, culminating in my grandmother Catalina Almanzar (b. 1899 in Fort Sumner), who married into the Jimenez and later Diaz lines.

Lucero families in this region have long been linked to specific rituals. These include hidden candles, Ladino whispers, and the Friday spring cleaning that left every surface shining.

Grandpa’s Diaz-Ramirez Line: J-FT235823 Crypto-Jew Traditions from Nuevo León

My grandfather, Luz Ramirez Diaz, came from Nuevo León. “Luz” itself means “light” — a symbolic name favored by crypto-Jews who called themselves people of the light. The Diaz and Ramirez surnames are commonly found in studies of northern Mexican converso communities. Grandpa’s deathbed wish for burial within twenty-four hours was pure halakha.

DNA projects in Nuevo León and South Texas commonly recover J1 signatures. These signatures have priestly characteristics in certain families. Such families often show these surnames and customs. His line is now genetically pinned to the 550 BCE branching of J-FT235823. It carried the same hidden practices. These include secret Shabbat preparations, the total house purification, the whispered language, and the quiet resistance to assimilation.

When my mother finally revealed at age 35 that we were Jewish, the pieces fell into place. Our priestly DNA runs on both flanks. Grandpa’s J-FT235823 line carries the Cohen markers. Grandma’s Halevi-Lucero side contributes the Levite heritage. We are a priestly family twice over.

Modern Texas Moves and the Recent Losses

In the late 1930s, the family moved to Amarillo for railroad and ranch work. Catalina Almanzar raised her children here, blending the New Mexico and Nuevo León traditions. The rancho became the sanctuary where the light was kept alive in secret.

Then came the tragedies that no test can prepare a family for. Larry Junior Jimenez, only 44, ran toward danger on March 22, 2026, to help others and was killed. His courage embodied the protective instinct that has always marked our line.

Eleven days earlier, the Austin fire claimed the lives of the three Lucero children. They were direct descendants through the Eva Jimenez branch. Their short lives carried the same spark that once illuminated the Temple menorah.

We honor them by remembering. Larry’s act of protection and the bright lives of Anyah, Athena, and Jeremy Jr. are now woven into the larger story of this priestly flame.

Dedication and Call to Cousins

To Larry Junior Jimenez: Your courage lives on in our family narrative. To Anyah, Athena, and Jeremy Jr.: Your light, though brief, still shines. We light candles for you. Every Jimenez, Lucero, Vigil, Almanzar, Diaz, Ramirez, Salazar, and allied cousin has a share.

You all hold this history, whether in Santa Fe, Las Vegas, Nuevo León, or Amarillo. The J-FT235823 CMH badge on my uncle’s test is yours. The Halevi surname and the crypto-Jewish customs are also yours. You inherit the double priestly inheritance as well. All of it belongs to you.

If any of these names resonate, please reach out. If the stories of hidden candles, Ladino, spring cleaning, or rancho Shabbat preparations resonate with you, please reach out. Share your pieces of the puzzle. The light grows brighter when we remember together.

The Light Endures

From the 550 BCE branching of J-FT235823 in ancient Judea, our family has carried the priestly fire on both sides. They survived through 3,000 years of exile, Inquisition, and hidden survival. Their journey extended to the ranches of Amarillo. Halevi-Lucero Levites and Diaz-Ramirez Cohanim — two streams from the same ancient Semitic source.

New Mexico Pioneers: Vigil & Lucero Chains

Francisco Montes Vigil I (1665 Zacatecas)—Reconquest hero, 1695 Páez Hurtado wagon, Moqui campaigns, Villasur survivor. Land grants, cattle—buried Santa Cruz 1730. Son Domingo (1693–1771), Cañada alcalde, married Pascuala Salazar (Salazar tie!). Their boy Juan Baptista (1721)—married María Francisca López (Lucero’s widow)—direct crossover.

Next: Joseph Ygnacio Vigil (b. 1759, Santa Cruz)—baptized in that adobe font. Son Antonio Alexandro Vigil López (1783)—se casó con María Dolores Olivas. Fast-track: María Narcisa Vigil (1832 Santa Cruz)—married Francisco “Franco” Almanzar (1830 San Miguel–1889 Las Vegas). Their daughter? Catalina Almanzar (1899 Fort Sumner–1973 Amarillo)—my grandma, married Frank Jimenez, then Luz Diaz (grandpa, secret Jew, quick burial ask).

Manuel Lucero (1853 San Miguel)—married Epunusena Muniz (1840). Daughter Delfina Muniz Lucero (1879–1956 Amarillo)—my great-grandma. Nine siblings—frontier crew in Sabinoso adobe.

Crypto whispers: Vigil/Montes from Andalucía/Zacatecas—converso hotbeds. Almanzar Arabic “watchtower,” Lucero “light”—hidden Sabbaths, pork skips. DNA? Grandpa Luz’s J1—priestly echo.

Yeah, that’s incredible—your family’s right at the ground floor of Santa Fe. The city kicked off around 1610. Juan de Oñate’s crew shifted north from San Gabriel. Real growth was spurred by settlers like Pedro Lucero de Godoy. He was born in 1617 as a soldier. His father, Juan López de Godoy, was born in Mexico City in 1599. His mother, Inés González, was also born in Mexico City in 1599.

He first married Petronila de Zamora. Later, he married Francisca Gómez Robledo. There are big Jewish ties there—her folks, Francisco Gómez and Ana Robledo, were conversos. Their kids spread out: Juan Lucero de Godoy, Diego, Catalina… all in early Santa Fe records, like 1670s Inquisition cases where they testified about marriages, land, bigamy, etc. There were no direct “we’re Jewish” flags. They played Catholic. Yet, historians peg 11 of Santa Fe’s 19 founding families as crypto-Jew stock. They blended in while keeping sparks alive.

Your grandma’s Lucero maiden? This connects directly to that. Pedro’s line became huge in the Rio Grande Valley. They owned spots like Los Luceros Hacienda (an old adobe ranch, still standing, with sheep grazing out front).

Francisco Lucero de Godoy (grandson) and his wife, Josefa, protected La Conquistadora during the 1680 Pueblo Revolt. La Conquistadora is the oldest Madonna statue in the US. They saved it from flames. Heroic cover? Or quiet faith nod? Either way, they survived, grew families—your Almanzar grandpa side mixed in later, watchtower name watching from the mesas.

Modern Moves: Texas Ranches & Recent Heartbreak

Catalina’s kids: Gregorio “Lolo” Jimenez (boxer), Eva Jimenez… family to Amarillo ~1937—railroad, ranches. Grandpa Luz Diaz—Nuevo León crypto, deathbed halakha. Mom’s rancho: candles, secrets.

Gil-White is right: the Jewish nation, with its ethical system of justice and liberation, is the most successful mechanism. Humanity has seen it reshaping civilization toward freedom and compassion. That system survived because families like ours kept the rituals alive. Ordinary people in Adobe homes and Texas ranches preserved the DNA.

Mom, your stories of the unknown tongue, the secret candles, and the exhaustive Friday purification led us here. The light you guarded in silence now burns openly in this record.

To all who carry these names and this blood: the history is yours. The DNA (J-FT235823) and the CMH badge are yours. The Semitic revolution and its priestly flame are yours.

We are still here. The light still burns.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Chapter 2: The Tree of Life

Guarded Mercy – Not Fairy-Tale Immortality

The Tree of Life in the middle of the Garden
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The Tree of Life is central to the Garden of Eden story. Yet, it rarely receives the attention it deserves. Most people fixate on the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil — the forbidden fruit, the temptation, the expulsion.

This is clear in Genesis 2:9. The Torah tells us: “The Lord God made every tree grow out of the ground. Each tree was pleasant to the sight and good for food.” The Tree of Life was in the middle of the garden. The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was also there.”

Notice the grammar. The phrase “in the middle of the garden” specifically modifies the Tree of Life. The Tree of Knowledge is mentioned afterward, without that central placement. From the very beginning, God puts the Tree of Life front and center.

It is the focus. Yet humanity is never explicitly warned against it. Instead, the first command is positive: “You can surely eat of every tree of the garden” (Genesis 2:16). That includes the Tree of Life.

One Tree or Two Trees

Only one tree carries a restriction. God commands, “But of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil you shall not eat. In the day that you eat of it you shall surely die” (Genesis 2:17). So why the later panic?

After the couple eats from the Tree of Knowledge, God says, “Behold, the man has become like one of us. He now knows good and evil. Now, he can put forth his hand. He take also of the Tree of Life and eat. He would then live forever—” (Genesis 3:22). Suddenly, the Tree of Life becomes dangerous.

Rabbi David Fohrman explains the logic beautifully: order matters. Eating from the Tree of Life before Knowledge would have been ideal — eternal life in innocence and connection. But once Knowledge is eaten, shame, moral awareness, and the reality of toil enter the picture.

Eternal life in that broken state would be a curse, not a blessing. Freezing forever in guilt and separation from God? Unthinkable. So, in mercy, God blocks the Tree of Life and sends humanity into exile. Exile is not punishment — it is protection and a reset. It forces growth through sweat, choice, and return.

This is the Torah’s psychology of the garden. The story is not about original sin or a cosmic fall requiring a savior. It is about humanity learning to distinguish itself from the animal world and choosing connection over shortcuts.

The Serpent’s Real Motivation – Envy, Not Lies or Devil

Christian tradition often calls the serpent a liar and identifies it as Satan or the devil. Torah says neither.

The serpent tells Eve: “You will not surely die. God knows something important. When you eat of it, your eyes will be opened. You will be like God, knowing good and evil” (Genesis 3:4-5). Was this a lie? Technically, no. They did not drop dead that day. Their eyes did open. They gained moral awareness. The serpent spoke partial truth — it simply omitted the heavy cost: shame, toil, pain in childbirth, and exile.

Rabbi David Fohrman points out something even more telling. The phrase “beasts of the field” (chayat hasadeh) appears only four times in the entire book of Genesis. It describes twice the creation and naming of the animals (Genesis 2). It describes the serpent twice (Genesis 3:1 and the context). The Torah deliberately links the serpent to those rejected animals.

God parades every beast and bird before Adam so that he can name them and seek a companion. None fit. Flamingo? Zebra? Hippopotamus? No soulmate. Then comes Eve — “bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh.” The contrast is stark. The animals were rejected; Eve is the perfect match.

Human or Snake: They are the Same

The serpent is the most human-like of all the beasts. It talks, it is clever, and it walks upright at first. It watches this rejection. Its cunning is motivated by envy. The midrash captures this allegorically: the serpent hoped Adam would eat the fruit and die so it would “marry” Eve. Not literal marriage, but a symbolic claim: “Why do you need another human? I am close enough. I can be your companion.”

This is the serpent’s real goal — to blur the line between human and animal. The goal is to degrade humanity to the level of beasts. It does so by offering a shortcut to god-like knowledge without the work of growth. The temptation is not abstract evil. It is the yetzer hara — our inner animal drive for quick wins and self-sufficiency without God.

Christianity later transforms this simple serpent into Satan. The Devil in a Red Suit supports the doctrine of original sin. Torah never does that. There is no fallen angel backstory in Genesis. Satan in Job is God’s tester, not a rebel. The serpent is just a crafty creature acting out of jealousy. No cosmic war. No inherited guilt requiring a savior’s blood. Just personal choice and the constant tension between animal instinct and divine image.

The Tale of Two Trees – Order and Mercy

The two trees are not equal. The Tree of Life sits in the center. The positive command is to eat from every tree. The restriction is narrow and specific. This setup reveals God’s hope. Humanity would first connect with a life-sustaining relationship with the Source. Only then would they navigate moral knowledge.

Eating Knowledge first changes everything. Moral awareness brings shame and the reality of consequences. Eternal life in that state would trap the soul in perpetual brokenness. God, in his mercy, drives the couple out. He stations cherubim with a flaming sword to guard the way back to the Tree of Life (Genesis 3:24).

The Tree and The Cherubim

Those cherubim only twice in the Torah. The first time they block access to the original Tree of Life. The second time, they are golden figures atop the Ark of the Covenant. They spread their wings protectively over the Torah. The Ten Commandments are inside (Exodus 25). Proverbs 3:18 makes the connection clear. She [Torah] is a tree of life to those who grasp her. Those who hold her fast are happy.

The message is profound. The raw Tree of Life in Eden offered physical eternity — too dangerous after Knowledge. The Torah becomes its spiritual replacement: a Tree of Life earned through study, clinging, and moral effort. Not instant immortality, but a life of meaning, rectification, and connection that transcends physical death.

This is why reincarnation (gilgul) and repeated mercy make sense in Jewish thought. Job 33:26-30 speaks of God reviving the soul “twice or three times” to bring it to the light of life. Exodus 20 promises kindness to thousands who love God. Finite sin does not deserve infinite punishment. Mercy repeats because growth takes time.

Paul and the Invention of Layers

Christianity claims its Bible builds directly on the Hebrew Torah. Yet the shift is dramatic. Paul (or the figure constructed around him) reinterprets everything through faith in Jesus’ death as the ultimate atonement. Law becomes a curse. Grace replaces work. Original sin dooms all humanity from Adam’s bite. A mediator is required.

Scholars like Dr. Nina Livesey argue that the Pauline letters show signs of later composition. They show rhetorical fiction in the Roman epistolary style. These letters are tied to Marcion’s circle in the mid-2nd century. Even traditional defenders acknowledge heavy editing and contradictions between Paul’s own words and the Book of Acts.

Rabbi Tovia Singer highlights misquotes: Paul twists Deuteronomy 30 (“the commandment is not too hard”) into something impossible. This twist turns obedience into despair. Thus, faith in Christ becomes the only escape.

Saul to Paul

Paula Fredriksen and Pamela Eisenbaum remind us that Paul saw himself as a Jew fulfilling end-times expectations for Gentiles. He required no circumcision and demanded exclusive loyalty to Israel’s God. Later, Christianity universalized and spiritualized it far beyond that. The result?

A new system layered on top of Torah, not growing organically from it. There is no mention of Satan as the serpent in Genesis. No inherited guilt requiring blood. No proxy savior. Just personal responsibility: “The soul that sins, it shall die” (Ezekiel 18).

Why add these layers when the Torah offers a direct connection? Job 9:33 cries out for “no arbiter” between man and God. The text invites a face-to-face relationship. Why invent a devil when the serpent’s motive is clear envy from the animal world? Why claim the Christian Bible is based on ours when so much is reinterpreted or added?

The Tree of Life Invitation to Question

The Tree of Life stands guarded for a reason. It is not withheld out of stinginess. It is protected until we are ready to handle eternal connection without freezing in brokenness. The Torah replaces the raw tree with something better. It offers a living path of study, moral choice, and clinging to God. This path produces fruit across generations.

Christian friends, I respect your belief that Jesus is the Messiah. Faith is personal. But when Christianity says its Bible is built on the Hebrew Torah, the claim deserves honest examination. The serpent did not lie outright. It was not the devil. Paul’s teachings introduced dramatic shifts that moved away from Torah’s direct mercy, personal teshuva, and repeated chances.

The real story of Eden is psychology, not cosmic courtroom drama. It asks, “Are you an animal or a divine image?” Connected or self-reliant — everything provided, no wish for God? The snake offered the shortcut. God offered the long path of growth.

The Tree of Life still waits — not as magic fruit, but as Torah grasped and held fast. Cling to it. Work the garden. Safeguard the bond. That is the Jewish invitation, open to all who seek the Source directly.

Growth is not a curse. It is a blessing.

Footnotes

  1. Rabbi David Fohrman presents the Aleph Beta series “Beasts of the Field” and “Tale of Two Trees.” These works explore several concepts. They include the envy link, the animal parade, and the equivalence between cherubim and the Torah.
  2. Rabbi Warren Goldstein, Bereishit lectures — exile as mercy.
  3. Rabbi Manis Friedman, “Why Adam & Eve Were Heroes” — voluntary descent, no sin.
  4. Efraim Palvanov, “Reincarnation in Judaism” series — Gilgul and Job 33.
  5. Dr. Nina Livesey, The Letters of Paul in Their Roman Literary Context (2024) — pseudepigrapha and rhetorical fiction.
  6. Rabbi Tovia Singer, “Paul the Apostle: Liar and Conman” — misquotes and anti-Torah rhetoric.
  7. Genesis 3:1-5 and midrash (Bereshit Rabbah) — serpent as envious beast.
  8. Proverbs 3:18 — Torah as Tree of Life.
  9. Job 9:33 and 33:26-30 — no mediator, repeated revival.
  10. Exodus 20:5-6 — mercy to thousands, iniquity limited generations.

Images for Blog (copy-paste ready; use alt text for SEO)

  1. Fohrman teaching with Hebrew search screen – alt: “Rabbi David Fohrman on beasts of the field and serpent motivation”
  2. Garden of Eden with Tree of Life in center – alt: “Tree of Life in the middle of the Garden of Eden”
  3. Cherubim with flaming sword at Eden gate – alt: “Cherubim guarding the Tree of Life”
  4. Golden cherubim on the Ark of the Covenant – alt: “Cherubim sheltering the Torah on the Ark”
  5. Adam naming the animals – alt: “Adam naming the beasts of the field – inoculation before Eve”

Why Christianity Never Got Out of the Garden

Where is The Tree Of Life

The Tree of Life.

Three Questions You Can Not Answer

From the moment the funerals for my cousins Shaul Junior and Teresa ended yesterday, the comments started. “He doesn’t believe in Jesus,” “He’s on the other side.” Family members know I have served as rabbi and chazan for the Jewish community since 2002. Despite this, no one asked me to speak. The silence was loud. It reminded me once again why this conversation matters.

Roxy, you and many others keep returning to the same point. You claim we are all sinners because of what happened in the Garden of Eden. Adam and Eve were in a perfect paradise. The serpent, also known as the devil, lied. They sinned, and humanity inherited original sin. Thus, someone had to die — Jesus — to pay the price.

Where Is The Tree Of Life

That is the foundation of Christianity. But when we closely examine the Torah itself, we realize that the story is simply not there. We need the help of our sages and the oral tradition to see this. The Garden of Eden is not a tragedy that requires an external savior. It is the deliberate beginning of humanity’s mission.

Let us start with the question that always stops Christians in their tracks: “Where is the Tree of Life today?” Three answers usually come back. First, some say the tree no longer exists. But the Torah tells us God planted the Tree of Life in the very center of the garden. He commanded Adam to eat from every tree.

That command included the Tree of Life. If it simply vanished or was destroyed after the sin, then God created something with no purpose. This idea contradicts everything we know about the Creator. Second, others say the Tree of Life is Jesus. Yet Genesis gives Adam and Eve no hint whatsoever about a future dying-and-rising savior or a cross.

If the tree were Jesus, God would have concealed the most important information in the story. He would have blocked access to his own redeemer with cherubim and a flaming sword. That makes God a confusing and even cruel storyteller. The third common answer is that the tree is hidden somewhere on Earth.

One Tree Not Two

It is in Israel near Caesarea, where a river bubbles up. But the geography in Genesis is different. One river flows out and splits into four (Pishon, Gihon, Tigris, Euphrates). This does not match any known location on the planet. The Talmud states plainly that “no eye has seen” Eden. So the tree is not lost or destroyed; it is guarded for a reason.

Rabbi David Fohrman explains the deeper truth in his lectures on “A Book Like No Other.” The Torah is not describing two separate trees. It is one tree with two faces. One face shows pure life and intimate closeness to God (the relational, Hashem aspect). The other signifies knowledge of good and evil (the Elohim aspect of rules and judgment).

They belong together. Adam and Chava reached for the knowledge side before they were ready for the full unity. That created the fracture. God then blocked access to the Tree of Life. This was not as punishment, but as mercy. This was so that humanity would not be locked forever in an immortal but broken state. We are meant to earn our way back.

The Angels With No Swords

We see the Tree of Life reappear in new forms as the Torah unfolds. At the burning bush in Exodus 3, there is fire, a tree, and an angel — but no flaming sword. God simply says, “I will be with you.” Then, God gives the instructions for the Mishkan in Exodus 25.

He tells the people to build Him a dwelling place. Why? Because this world is still tohu vavohu — dark, watery chaos, the same raw state as before creation. Human beings can’t live in raw chaos, so we need an ark. Noah survived the flood inside a literal ark. We survive by building the Torah as our spiritual ark. This structure of laws and mitzvot transforms chaos into a home for Hashem.

These cherubim once guarded the Tree of Life in Eden. Now, they stand over the Ark of the Covenant. They protect the Ten Sayings. What once blocked access now invites service. There is no gap in the story that requires an external savior. The blueprint is finished from the beginning.

The Great Choice

Yet, this also brought the possibility of real love, real children, and real tikkun (repair) of the world. God responded by naming her Chava, mother of all life. The sages teach that the righteous women in Egypt had a significant merit. This merit ultimately redeemed the entire people (Sota 11b). Throughout our history, women like Miriam, Esther, and Yael have possessed intuitive, big-picture wisdom. Countless others have also contributed. Their wisdom has saved Israel.

My own wife, Bathsheba, has been that woman for forty-one years. She does not quote verses the way I do, but she lives them every day. She has held our family together through funerals, weddings, birthdays, and countless crises, treating every relative as her own. My niece recently told her, “You have been the backbone of this family. You are a true woman of the Bible.” That is the Tree of Life in action — not memorized words, but lived Torah.

Male and Female Adam and Eve
Male and Female Adam and Eve

Modern science actually confirms this ancient wisdom. Dr. Iain McGilchrist has shown why the human brain is divided into two hemispheres. The left brain is narrow.

It focuses on grabbing, controlling, and manipulating details. Think of the serpent’s “take it now” whisper or Cain’s possessive nature.

Kayin comes from the root qanah, to acquire. The right brain sees the whole picture — relationships, empathy, flow, and wonder. Our culture today is heavily left-brain dominant — academia, rules, “I know everything.”

But real growth and redemption often come from the feminine, right-brain wisdom that Chava demonstrated. Without that balance, we stay stuck in acquisition and control.

The Tree and The Serpent

The serpent itself is not the devil. Rabbi Tovia Singer points out that the curse placed on it is actually ironic. It crawls on its belly and eats dust. This means its food is everywhere. It never has to depend on God or pray.

Humans, by contrast, must work, struggle, and partner with Hashem. Rabbi Fohrman makes a powerful checklist. Before the curse, the serpent walked upright. It talked. It was more cunning (arum) than any beast. Distinguishing delicacies. It checked every human box.

Human Or Beast

The Torah is asking each of us a question. Will you live like an animal that follows raw instinct? Or will you live like a human being who can choose and overcome? The yetzer hara — the evil inclination — is not an external enemy sent by Satan. It is part of us. It serves as a divine tool. Isaiah 45:7 teaches, “I form light and create darkness, I make peace and create evil.” Without it, there is no real choice, no growth, no ascent.

There is no doctrine of original sin in the Torah. Adam and Eve began as beings of light, made in God’s image. After they ate, God clothed them in skin. The Hebrew words for “light” (or) and “skin” (or) are the same. It was a transition into physical life, not a total cosmic wreck. Even after Cain killed Abel, he confessed that his burden was too great to bear.

God did not destroy him; He placed a mark on Cain for protection and allowed him to live. Repentance and deliverance commonly recur again and again in Genesis. The story is teaching us the anatomy of the human soul. It shows us how to master our emotions. The Torah teaches us how to rule over the yetzer hara. It encourages us to take responsibility rather than fall into blame and victimhood.

Torah Scroll

Discipline and Auto Suggestion

This is where the teachings of Napoleon Hill, which I have studied daily since 1988, feel so deeply Torah. Hill repeatedly says that victimhood and blame are poisons. Discipline, not genius or strength, changes everything. We do not pray for miracles — we create them through consistent daily habits.

Judaism built exactly that system into daily life. Every morning in Shacharit, we recite the Shema and remind ourselves who we want to be. At Mincha, we pause the chaos of the day. In the evening, before sleep, we commit our spirit back to God. It is autosuggestion rooted in responsibility. Isaiah 26:3 captures the result: “Great peace have they whose mind is stayed on Thee, because they trust in Thee.”

At the funerals yesterday and in many conversations with Christian friends like Roxy, the deeper issue eventually surfaces: end-times theology. Both Christianity and Islam ultimately write endings in which Judaism does not continue as it is.

The End Of Your Book

In the Christian Book of Revelation, Jews return to the land and rebuild the Third Temple. They then follow a false Messiah (the Antichrist figure invented by Christian theology). Believers are raptured out. Jews endure the tribulation because they chose the “wrong” Messiah. Jesus returns to rule the world. It is a covert form of replacement theology. Islam is more overt.

Certain Hadith describe end-times battles. In which Muslims fight Jews. Until even the stones and trees cry out, “O Muslim, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.” In both visions — one whispered, one shouted — Jews ultimately disappear or submit. There is no ongoing role for the Jewish people as distinct witnesses to Torah.

The Torah itself never commands belief in a future “Messiah” as one of the 613 mitzvot. The word “mashiach” simply means “anointed one” and is used for kings, priests, and even the non-Jewish king Cyrus.

King David

Prophets speak of a Davidic king who will bring peace and ingathering. Nevertheless, the core demand of Torah is responsibility. We must fix ourselves and repair the world through mitzvot. We do not wait for a savior to do the work for us.

Zechariah makes this especially clear and closes the circle. Chapter 12 describes an end-time war in which nations attack Jerusalem like a heavy stone. God strengthens Israel, they prevail, and then comes great mourning over “the one they pierced.”

This can’t be Jesus’ crucifixion. The entire chapter is set in a future context of national victory and transformation. It is not a first-century Roman execution. Similarly, Zechariah 9:9 — the king comes humbly on a donkey. It is in the same end-time sequence of war. An ensuing peace follows after Gog and Magog (Ezekiel 38–39, the coalition war involving Iran).

Prophecy Unfulfilled

Christians claim this was fulfilled on Palm Sunday, but there was neither the crushing of enemies nor global peace. Some Muslim traditions claim that the second Caliph, Umar, fulfilled it when he entered Jerusalem on a donkey.

Neither reading matches the full prophetic picture. The real fulfillment still lies ahead. It will come after the final war. The true anointed king will ride in humility to bring lasting peace.

The Garden of Eden, then, was never a story about irreversible catastrophe. It was the deliberate setup for humanity’s mission: to descend, to choose, to struggle, to repair. The Tree of Life was never lost — it reappears as Torah itself.

Women have repeatedly been the ones who see the bigger picture and save us. The yetzer hara is not an enemy to be eradicated by an outside savior. Instead, it is a divine tool we are meant to master. Daily discipline and responsibility — not blame or victimhood — are the path.

Both Christianity and Islam, in their different ways, still need the garden to be a total fall. This makes their invented savior necessary. The Torah never leaves that question unanswered.

At the funerals yesterday, I was sidelined. This was not because I lack faith. It was because my faith is in the Torah as it is. My Messianic past disappeared. I called myself a rabbi, but was still thinking entirely as a Christian. This fell away when I returned fully to Judaism. Many turned their backs. That is painful, but it is also clarifying.

No Ordinary Tree

My wife has been the quiet backbone of our family for forty-one years. My mother is now in hospice, returning to the place where all souls were created on the sixth day. Our family’s Cohen lineage reaches back centuries. We are still here, still witnesses, still building the ark of Torah in a chaotic world.

The Torah is a book like no other. It is philosophy, psychology, and the anatomy of body, mind, and soul all in one. It shows us exactly how to fix ourselves. Without the oral tradition and the insights of our sages, the Bible remains incomplete and easily misunderstood.

I have studied both Napoleon Hill and the Torah for decades. That is why I see the same eternal thread running through both. We do not pray for miracles. We create them through daily responsibility, discipline, and a mind stayed on God.

Christianity never got out of the Garden because it needs the fall to be total and irreversible. The Torah shows us the fall was never a fall — it was the beginning of the ascent.

The Tree of Life is still here. The path is still open. We do not need a savior. We only need to choose, every single day, to become the human beings we were sent here to be.


Hazan Gavriel ben David

Shabbat: Dennis Preger and Charlie Kirk

To Dennis Prager, my thanks for writing your Rational Bible and doing Men’s Hour. I listen here in Amarillo, Texas, on 940 KIXZ right after 911. Your program was on for a year or so here in Amarillo, Texas.

I do not know if I would have kept listening to Charlie Kirk if he had not mentioned Dennis Prager. Which kept me interested. The Rational Bible was in my Amazon E-Books. I started listening to Charlie because Rush passed away. I tuned in because Rush was gone, and that silence hurt—like losing a grandfather who argued with me over coffee. After hearing Charlie Kirk for a week. I knew he was the next Rush.

So there I was listening to Charlie March twenty-first, twenty twenty-one, flipping stations, landing on your voice. You were loud, unapologetic—Jesus as the answer, the world’s savior. Pastors on your show kept saying, “Jews will see Him one day, before the end.” I’d grip the wheel, mutter, “Not happening.”

Back then, I wasn’t Orthodox yet. I was a Baptist until I was seven years old. I served as an altar boy at Saint Martin’s Catholic church. Then the military pulled me back to Bible study. Loved the verses—read ’em like maps. Non-denominational by eighty-eight, Trinity Fellowship till two thousand one. Then Mom drops the bomb: “You’re Jewish.”

Hebrew Roots Messianic Jew

Messianic phase kicked in—Jesus plus Torah, trying to square circles. But by twenty twelve, the proofs ran dry. Virgin birth? Didn’t match Isaiah. Suffering servant? Not a god-man. End-times conversion? Torah says Israel stays Israel. I exhausted it all. What stuck? The nation—scattered two thousand years, hated, reborn nineteen forty-eight. That’s no accident. God left a sign: land, people, heritage.

The Burning Bush

So I walked. No more cross. Back to shul, davening, learning Hebrew like it was oxygen. Became Hazan at Beit Hashoavah—B-E-I-T H-A-S-H-O-A-V-A-H—leading services, singing Torah portions. Vayakhel-Pekudei? Mine. God gathers Israel after the calf mess and says to keep Shabbat. Not rules—reset. Holiness in the grind.

Now? The Iran war is twenty-one days old. Missiles arc over Jerusalem, Iron Dome lights up. Natanz gone again—no leak. The US and Israel hit energy grids and leadership. Proxies decimated. And I see it: prophecy live. Ezekiel thirty-six—mountains produce fruit for My people Israel. Land was swamps under Ottomans, Brits, Arabs—barren. Now? Galilee vineyards, Negev farms, tech exports. Only for us. Miracles stack—strikes miss civilians, wind shifts rockets. God steers.

Charlie Kirk- Socrates The Philosopher

Charlie, you preached truth. I yelled because your truth felt like erasure. But here’s mine: Israel isn’t a relic—it’s proof. Every word of God is true. No replacement. No fade-out. We’re waiting on the last war—redemption. And yeah, I still carry that Christian curse: Revelation’s drama, two witnesses, beasts. But now? I see ’em different. Not doom—testimony. America, Israel—Bible-believers standing amid chaos. Trump and Netanyahu? Preemptive hits, ending threats. Like Churchill vs. fascism.

So if you’re listening somewhere—reach me. We’ll sit Shabbat, unpack verses. God is involved every day. Don’t drift. Anchor there.

Prager’s Quiet Voice

Dennis, if Charlie were here, I’d tell him: you were the reason I didn’t shut off the radio that day. After the anger at his Jesus talk, your name came up—like a lifeline. I’d been hearing you since two thousand one, right after Mom’s revelation. 940 AM KIXZ only carried your program for a year or so, and I did not chase it down.

You weren’t yelling; you were reasoning. Rational Bible? That series changed everything. Not sermons—just logic: Torah’s not myth, it’s blueprint. Shabbat? God’s gift to everyone—unplug, recharge, honor the Creator. No halacha pressure, just human need.

Charlie raved about it. He devoured 245 hours and called you weekly. He even dedicated his last book, Stop in the Name of God, to you. I paused. He wasn’t borrowing; he was soaking it up. You flipped his life from grind to rest. And mine? From Messianic confusion to Orthodox clarity. You bridged worlds without forcing.

The Return Home Sinai

The Kippah – The One Above

“Live as if God exists,” you say—because without Him, good and evil become opinions. Your new book, If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil—out February twenty-fourth—nails it. Morality floats without an anchor. “All is permitted,” Dostoevsky warned. You’re not proving God; you’re showing what happens if we pretend He isn’t there.

Look at this war—twenty-one days in, Iran missiles over Jerusalem, Iron Dome blazing. US and Israel hit back—Natanz dust, leadership gone. Proxies crumbling. Without God steering, it’s chaos: feelings rule, blame flies. But here? Purpose. Land blooms only for Israel—Ezekiel thirty-six: “mountains produce branches and fruit for My people.” Not random.

God’s involved, every day. You say reason fails alone—we need a divine compass. That’s why I stayed tuned: you taught me to clarify. You also taught me to listen to clarify what the other side believes. You unpacked the truth. Shabbat as reset, family as holy space—stuff Charlie echoed, but you rooted it deeper.

The World Needs Shabbat

Charlie got close—kids rushing in Friday night, everything off. But you? You showed why: time’s not ours. God sets the clock—new moons, festivals, Shabbat. Abraham kept it pre-Sinai. Noah’s rainbow? Universal sign—rest for all flesh. Your voice whispered: unplug, honor. No drift. As a Hazan, I sing it—Torah portions like Vayakhel: gather, keep holy. Home’s Mishkan now. Table, altar, meals, prayers. You taught that without saying it—steady, calm, like a lighthouse in fog.

So Dennis—thank you. You kept me listening when others would’ve shut me out. Charlie learned from you; I learned too. Now, with Iran raging, EU hedging, threats everywhere—your words ring: live like He’s real. Because He is. And if Charlie’s out there somehow—reach me at Beit Hashoavah. We’ll talk over coffee. God steers. We don’t drift.

 Isaiah 53 Not Jesus

Kirk’s Fire & My Anger

Charlie, you were all heat from day one. I remember that first broadcast—your voice booming, no brakes. “Jesus Christ is the savior, the world’s gotta know Him.” Pastors rolled in: “Jews will recognize Him before the end—it’s the final piece.” I’d sit in traffic, radio cranked, yelling back: “That’s not Torah! That’s replacement!” Felt personal—like you were erasing me. I fired off two emails: prophecies don’t match; Isaiah 53’s not a god-man; no mass conversion at the close. Nothing came back. Silence stung worse than the words.

I was fresh out of Messianic—still raw from ditching the cross. Baptist upbringing taught me the Bible’s literal; Catholic altars gave me ritual. But Jesus as Messiah? Proofs folded. So hearing you push it—hard, as truth demanded—hit like a betrayal. You weren’t just conservative; you were missionary. Every guest echoed: “Israel sees Him, game over.” I’d think, “Charlie, you love truth—why ignore this?” It grated because I wanted dialogue, not doctrine. Felt aimed at me, at every Jew who’d just found roots.

Turning Point

But then, your Prager mentions. You talked about the Rational Bible as if it saved you. “Dennis changed my life—Shabbat’s real, unplug, recharge.” Called him weekly, devoured hours of commentary. Even dedicated Stop in the Name of God to him—arguing Christians should keep Shabbat, phone off, family on. That cracked the door.

Prager wasn’t preaching Jesus; he was unpacking Torah—rest as God’s rhythm, time not ours. Suddenly, you sounded… student, not conqueror. Like you’d tasted something older, deeper. “Jewish thinking,” you’d say—discipline, cycles, Creator over chaos.

Anger eased. Not gone—your Jesus core stayed—but I kept listening. Saw overlap: Shabbat as reset, not rule. You lived it—Friday nights, kids piling in, everything else quiet. No grind, just holy. That’s what Torah whispers: Vayakhel-Pekudei, gather after mess, keep Shabbat. Home’s Mishkan—table altar, meals, prayers. You echoed it without knowing. Prager bridged us—you borrowed his wisdom, I found mine.

The Christian Bible

Still, the split lingered. Your Bible ends with Jews bending—Torah gone, Temple dust. Mine? Israel endures. No fade. Church Fathers backed that hate—Justin twisting Scripture, Chrysostom raging. But you? You weren’t venomous. Just… honest to your script. And yeah, it hurt. But Prager kept me tuned—your fire had light too.

If you were here, I’d say, “Thanks for the push.” Made me dig deeper. Now, with Iran missiles flying, EU hedging—your Shabbat call feels urgent. Rest under God, not drift. Reach me at Beit Hashoavah—we’ll talk. Truth’s bigger than any one verse.

Shabbat – Humanity’s Blueprint

Charlie, if we were sitting here with coffee, I’d lean in and say: Shabbat wasn’t just a Jewish practice. Shabbat was one you admired. The Sabbath was much more meaningful. It was something much more meaningful. It was the heartbeat you kept circling back to.

You’d describe coming home Friday night, kids running into your arms, phone off, everything else fading. “The world stops,” you’d say. “Family first.” That wasn’t rules or religion for you; it was reset. Recharge. Something deep and human. And here’s the truth I want you to see: that instinct wasn’t invented at Sinai. It’s baked into humanity from the very beginning—God’s blueprint for all of us.

Look at Genesis. Creation ends with day seven—God rests, blesses it, sanctifies it. Not because He was tired, but to stamp rest into the rhythm of the world. Then the flood hits: total wipe, chaos waters again like day one. But post-flood? It’s re-creation.

Noah steps out as the new Adam—blessed to be fruitful, multiply, rule the earth. His name? Noach—from “nuach,” meaning rest or comfort. Lamech named him, hoping he’d ease the curse on the ground, but really, Noah reboots rest for everyone.

Rabbi David Fohrman nails it in his Aleph Beta series on Noah: the flood is de-creation, then full reboot. Ark rests on the seventh month. Clean animals come in sevens. Rainbow covenant? Not “between Me and Israel”—it’s “with you and with every living creature,” all flesh, all Noah’s descendants.

Universal. Seven colors, seven-day waits—echoing creation week. Shabbat isn’t Sinai-only; it’s stamped into the reset world for all humanity. Before any Jew exists, God wires rest into humanity’s DNA.

Then Abraham picks up the thread. He wasn’t the first monotheist—Shem and Ever already knew God. But he broadcast it: your time isn’t yours. God sets the rhythm—new moons, appointed times, Shabbat as the big one. Genesis twenty-six verse five makes it clear. God tells Isaac, “because Abraham obeyed My voice.

Suffering Servants

I Am With You

He kept My charge, My commandments, My statutes, and My laws.” Full Torah language—before Sinai. Sages say the Torah was with Adam, passed from father to son. Abraham guarded it and taught Isaac. Rabbi Akiva Tatz puts it beautifully: Abraham wanted everyone to understand that time belongs to God, not us. Stop claiming your days. Honor the schedule.

My Torah Reading, Vayakhel-Pekudei, brings it home. After the golden calf chaos, God gathers Israel. “Six days’ work shall be done. On the seventh day, there shall be to you a holy day. It is a Sabbath of solemn rest to the Lord.” Not optional—anchor. Rabbi Warren Goldstein teaches that the home became the new Mishkan when the Temple fell.

Table turns altar, challah the offering, wine like libations. Every meal echoes the daily prayers—shacharit, mincha, and maariv. Elders sit, teach Pirkei Avot ethics. Kids learn: life isn’t an endless grind; it’s set apart for holiness. Focus higher than ourselves—individual gifts merge into one holy project, like the Mishkan builders. Contrast Babel: unity for self, no heaven—so scattered. Mishkan? “We built it” because God was the center.

You pushed this, Charlie—Shabbat for Christians too. Prager showed you the way. But Torah says it’s for everyone first—a pre-Sinai promise, a post-flood gift. Noah’s rainbow whispers it to all flesh. Abraham taught it widely. Sinai made a covenant for Israel, but the wording was always human.

That’s why your Friday nights hit different. Kids in arms, rest under God—not hustle. Judaism lives it: higher birth rates, strong families, and purpose. Without that anchor? Drift. Opinions clash, no unity. With it? Holy reset.

So yeah—Shabbat’s not Jewish-only. It’s humanity’s blueprint. God wired us for rest, for a higher purpose. In this war, with missiles flying and fear rising, we need it more than ever. Unplug. Recharge. Remember who’s steering.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

From Shadows to Truth: My Journey Back to Torah – Exposing the Replacement Lie in Messianic Teachings

In 2001, my mother revealed that I was Jewish. My maternal line is Sephardic, tracing back to Spain, with my grandfather a Cohen—a priestly descendant. Family tradition even links us through cousins to Gamliel the Elder, the renowned first-century rabbi. Growing up, I was deeply interested in the wisdom and teachings of Messianic Teachers. My father’s side is Black.

They carry the E-M2 (E1b1a) Y-haplogroup. This lineage is dominant in West and Central Africa. It is also common among African Americans due to historical migrations. This mixed heritage in one family
beautifully illustrates my rabbi, Chaim Richmond’s, teaching.

He has always said: Hashem’s children encompass the whole world. Each nation, each person, is unique with a distinct place in the divine plan. The Jewish people were chosen to accept the Torah. They are also chosen to pass on the Torah to the nations. Yet, every person has their role.

The Torah

I was raised in a Christian context where the “Old Testament” formed the foundation. I sought a deeper understanding of my Jewish roots. Rabbi Chaim Richmond became—and remains—my spiritual compass. The pressures of this world can pull me off course. It holds dominant Christian narratives and often resists unfiltered truth. He gently redirects me to the eternal Torah.

My search led me into the Messianic movement. Teachers from First Fruits of Zion visited our synagogue. I learned from Avi Ben-Mordechai, Holisa Alewine, Joe Good, and Rico Cortes. I studied the teachings of Eddie Chumney, Monte Judah, Bill Cloud, Tony Robinson, Jim Staley, and Michael Rood. FFOZ was also influential in my studies.

They presented Yeshua (Jesus) as the Jewish Messiah who fulfilled Torah shadows and types. The message resonated: Gentiles grafted in, Torah still relevant, Israel central yet completed through the Messiah.

I supported these ministries financially with annual thousand-dollars. I introduced them to God’s Learning Channel and opened doors at our synagogue for lectures and teaching. Audiences grew. From 2001 through the mid-2018, I questioned and researched every concept, never accepting anything blindly.

Going Home A Jew Returning

In 2008, a group of eleven of us traveled to Israel. One personal side goal was to meet Tovia Singer and explain why I believed Yeshua was the Messiah of Israel. That meeting was pivotal. It was merged with years of listening to Singer’s counter-missionary teachings.

I also listened to Rabbi Akiva Tatz on the future Messianic age. I listened to Manis Friedman, Lawrence Kellerman, Rabbi David Foreman, and Rabbi Zev Leff. Especially impactful was Rabbi Ephraim Palvanov’s insightful series on Edom. These experiences planted seeds of reevaluation.

The unbroken chain of Jewish tradition—father to son for over 3,300 years—proved decisive. Yemenite Jews, where children as young as eight can recite and discuss Tanakh in depth, embody this living transmission.

Deuteronomy 32:7 commands: “Remember the days of old. Consider the years of many generations. Ask your father, and he will tell you. Your elders will inform you.” I returned fully to Judaism, guided by the elders and the pure Torah.

The Teachers’ “Proofs” – Creative Layers, Not Plain Torah

The Messianic teachers crafted compelling connections between Torah events and Yeshua. Bill Cloud, in lectures I still own on CD, linked the Exodus timeline. He noted the departure around the 14th of Nisan. He also mentioned a “resurrection” alignment on the 17th. This suggests the Red Sea crossing represented a new beginning. Similar ideas in Eddie Chumney’s The Seven Festivals of the Messiah and other Hebrew Roots teachings. These teachings tie dates, like Noah’s ark resting on the 17th of the seventh month, to Nisan 17. They do this via calendar overlaps.

Jewish tradition tells a different story. The Passover meal and the 10th plague occurred on the 14th/15th of Nisan. The Exodus began on the 15th. The Red Sea split on the seventh day of Passover—the 21st of Nisan. The Song of the Sea was then sung. This is the climax of the festival week, commemorated as Shevi’i shel Pesach. Classical sources, midrash, and calendars from Chabad and Orthodox authorities confirm this. The seven days of matzah mark the total redemption. No mainstream Jewish source supports a 17th of Nisan crossing. The Messianic alignment uses a forced typological fit. It intends to parallel the resurrection. This relies on numerology rather than on explicit Torah text.

Passover: Bold Defiance Against Idolatry, Not Sin Atonement

The most significant distortion concerns the Passover lamb itself. Rico Cortes of Wisdom in Torah Ministries teaches that the blood on the doorposts formed a covenant. This covenant made Israel the adopted sons of God. He then draws a direct line ahead. Over one thousand years later, God sent a mediator. (JOB 9:33 )

This mediator was His own son, Yeshua. Yeshua would bring the empire of the Adversary to its knees. He would restore and expand the Kingdom of God to include all people. These are the people who choose to accept the blood of Yeshua as a covenant.” He connects this explicitly to John 1:29—“Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.”

This interpretation imports New Testament theology onto a Torah event whose plain meaning is the opposite.

Will You Not Stone Us

Moses tells Pharaoh in Exodus 8:26, “It would not be right to do so. We shall sacrifice the abomination [to’evah] of the Egyptians to the Lord our God. If we sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, will they not stone us?”

Rashi and other commentators explain that sheep and rams were sacred to the Egyptians. They associated these animals with deities like the ram-headed Amun-Ra or Khnum. Israelites were commanded to select a lamb on the 10th of Nisan. They kept it visibly in their homes for four days. Then, they slaughtered and roasted it publicly on the 14th.

Blood on the lintel and doorposts was a visible sign of separation. It showed faithfulness to Hashem amid a powerful idolatrous empire. God “passed over” the marked homes in judgment upon Egypt’s gods, protecting those who rejected idolatry.

Pesach Is Not A Sin Offering

The korban Pesach is not a sin offering (chatat), whose purpose is atonement. It shares some consumption rules with shelamim (peace offerings) and is eaten by the family. Yet, Rambam (Maimonides) and the Talmud classify it as a distinct category. It is a male yearling lamb or kid, roasted whole with no bones broken. It must be consumed entirely that night with matzah and bitter herbs. Any leftovers are burned by morning.

Shelamim fosters peace between the offerer, God, and the community, but does not primarily forgive sins. The Passover story is repeated at every Seder for over three millennia. It emphasizes redemption through courageous rejection of dominant false gods: “We slaughtered the god of the Egyptians before their eyes, and Hashem delivered us.”

The Lamb Is A False Deity

How, then, can it symbolize a figure whose death atones for the world’s sins? Tovia Singer often challenges Christian seminaries on this point. He argues that the lamb represented the false deity we publicly rejected and destroyed. It was not a savior whose blood we embraced for personal redemption. The Messianic overlay adds a layer foreign to the Torah’s emphasis on faithfulness and anti-idolatry.

Rico identifies as a Kohen (“Eliezer ben Kohen” in online profiles). When I first encountered him, interactions felt reserved and occasionally puzzling—scheduled lectures moved without clear notice. Friendship developed only after I introduced my Persian Jewish friend, Dr. Bijan Denishfar, who began financially supporting the ministry. Yet when I returned to traditional Judaism, warnings circulated: “Run from them as fast as you can.” No celebration of a Jew returning to the covenant. Instead, exclusion.

Esau, Ishmael, and the End-Times Clash

Bill Cloud’s teachings on Esau have evolved. In earlier Hebrew Roots circles, links were drawn between Esau/Edom and adversarial forces. These discussions often occurred in collaborations with Brad Scott(may his name be for a blessing). They sometimes included Islam.

In Esau Rising, Cloud describes the “spirit of Esau.” It is carnal and self-entitled, and hostile to divine order. This spirit manifests in modern moral decay, government overreach, and opposition to biblical values. In a March 2026 interview with Glenn Beck, Cloud discussed biblical patterns pointing to Islamic expansion. He mentioned “Arab kingdoms” and east winds as symbols of jihad. Nevertheless, he did not directly equate Esau to Islam.

After listening to that interview with my wife, I texted him: “Who is Esau?” His reply: “Genetically or spiritually?” This felt like an evasion. In earlier conversations, I raised questions about why the Jewish people as a whole never accepted Yeshua. These questions elicited warnings that certain rabbis “know a lot” and are “dangerous.”

Esau -Edom-Rome-Christianity

Rabbinic tradition offers clearer identification. Rabbi Ephraim Palvanov’s “Understanding Edom” series traces Esau to Rome. He identifies Herod the Idumean (of Edomite descent) as a Roman-installed ruler. The series discusses the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE. It also mentions Constantine’s Christianization of the empire at Nicaea. This process incorporated pagan elements while distancing from Jewish practice.

Medieval rabbis used “Edom” as a coded reference for Christian Europe. Britain’s role in spreading Christianity through imperial expansion fits the “live by the sword” prophecy of Genesis 27:40. Replacement theology is the idea that the Church supplants Israel because Jews “rejected” the Messiah. It echoes exactly the hubris warned against in Obadiah and Malachi.

In the end-times framework of Tanakh and midrash, Esau (associated with the Christian West) and Ishmael (Islamic world) may clash, yet both ultimately target Jacob/Israel—the rightful heir. The strategy to seize the inheritance is simple: eliminate the legitimate son. Scripture and tradition declare that God will judge Edom; Jacob will prevail.

DNA Evidence: Receipts from Science and Tradition

The world often labels Jews as occupiers or thieves of the land. Both the Bible and science push back.

Genesis describes Noah surviving the flood with his three sons—Shem, Ham, and Japhet. Genesis 10 outlines the nations descending from them. My paternal line traces through my father’s E-M2 (E1b1a) haplogroup. This lineage originated in Africa, East or Central. It shows the highest diversity and frequency in West and Central Africa, with 70-97% in many Niger-Congo populations.

This haplogroup spread with Bantu migrations and later through the transatlantic slave trade. My FamilyTreeDNA test on this line shows zero matches at the deep Big Y level. There are dozens of downstream SNPs (CTS, FGC, FT, and other markers). This is not unusual. It indicates I am among the first in this specific, highly refined subclade to test at this resolution. Many variants are private or rare, awaiting future testers to create matches. This highlights the uniqueness and specificity of individual paternal stories.

My GrandFather Is a Cohen

My maternal Jewish line tells a different chapter. My uncles tested positive for the Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH) in haplogroup J1-P58 (J-M267 subclade). Studies show this signature appears in roughly 45-60% of men claiming Cohen status. This is true across Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi (including Sephardic) communities. They share an estimated common ancestor from around 3,000 years ago in the Near East.

Frequencies are notable among Cohanim (around 46% across key studies) and higher in some Sephardic samples. Our family’s Sephardic Spanish roots, with the marker also appearing in German Ashkenazi contexts, show post-1492 expulsions and medieval migrations. This Levantine priestly continuity supports the unbroken chain from Aaron through the elders.

Science Proves The Torah True

Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson’s Traced emphasizes that all paternal Y-chromosome lines ultimately trace back to three primary founders. This echoes Noah’s three sons in a framework aligning with Genesis. Abraham’s covenant flows specifically through Isaac. It also flows through Jacob (the Shem line in the chosen branch: Shem → Arphaxad → Abraham). The physical land promises and role as Torah-bearers belong to Jacob’s descendants.

Jews and Arabs share significant ancient Levantine (Canaanite) ancestry, affirming indigenous ties to the region. The Black Sea deluge hypothesis provides geological context for flood traditions. Around 7,600–8,800 years ago, Mediterranean waters rapidly inundated a freshwater lake. This created catastrophic local flooding. It inspired regional deluge memories, though not a global event.

We All Have Three Fathers

My family embodies diversity within unity. It includes African paternal depth (E-M2 with private markers and now zero matches). It also includes Sephardic Cohen continuity (J1-P58). This does not contradict Torah. Rabbi Chaim teaches that every nation and individual has a unique place.

The covenant inheritance through Jacob remains with the physical descendants. It stays with the elders’ chain. It does not extend to symbolic replacements or “lost branch” claims. These claims lack DNA or historical receipts. No Messianic teacher I have supported has produced equivalent evidence of priestly or Abrahamic lineage.

The Betrayal That Exposed the Lie

Here is the most personal and damning evidence against the replacement theology that these teachers promote. For years, they accepted my financial support and the platforms I helped open.

When I returned to traditional Judaism—embracing the elders, the 3,300-year chain, and pure Torah without added layers—they cut contact. Warnings spread through their circles: “Run from Archie and his family. Have nothing to do with them.”

Rico, after receiving financial support from my introduced contacts, became friendly and participated in the distancing. Bill Cloud sidestepped direct questions. Others simply ghosted. If their message were truly biblical, they should have rejoiced.

Examples include the parable of the lost sheep or Ezekiel’s call for restoration of scattered Israel. A Jew returning to the covenant should be cause for celebration. Instead, fear and shunning prevailed. This mirrors historical patterns where those claiming to supersede Judaism treat returning Jews as threats rather than brothers.

This reaction reveals the core. It is not a genuine grafting-in that honors Israel’s ongoing chosen role. Instead, it is a subtle replacement. The original heirs become optional. New claimants take center stage through belief alone.

A Call to Return to the Source Not To Replace

To Bill Cloud, Rico Cortes, Eddie Chumney, Monte Judah, Avi Ben-Mordechai, and Diana Dye: Thank you for teaching me. Your teachings have added extra layers to the Torah. These contributions added shadows and types.

The plain text and Jewish tradition do not support these additions. The Passover lamb was about public defiance of Egyptian idolatry and faithfulness to Hashem—not a sin-atoning savior for the world. Rabbinic sources recognize Esau with Rome and its Christian successor. They do not view Esau merely as a vague “spirit” or shifting modern foe.

Claims of Gentiles as Ephraim or lost branch inheritors lack both biblical precision and DNA receipts. I sent materials, including Palvanov’s Edom lectures and genetic information. The responses were evasion or silence.

Betrayed: Messianic No More – But Forgiven

I funded, promoted, and trusted. Upon my return home, betrayal followed. That pattern exposes the theology more clearly than any debate.

To readers still in Messianic or Christian circles: You once walked a similar path. Examine the Torah on its own terms. Consult the elders as Deuteronomy commands. The Seder recounts the slaughter of Egypt’s gods and Hashem’s deliverance—not the embrace of a new deity for atonement. Esau faces judgment; Jacob inherits. DNA and archaeology affirm Jewish indigenous continuity in the land alongside Abraham’s broader seed, not occupiers inventing history.

Replacement Claims

The world is filled with noise and competing claims. Yet, the chain endures. Yemenite children master Tanakh. My uncles have confirmed Cohen markers. Rabbi Chaim provides steady guidance. Truth resides in the unbroken transmission from Sinai.

I emerged from Messianic shadows into the clear light of Torah. The journey was difficult but liberating. Others seeking authenticity find the same courage to ask the fathers and elders. Hashem’s plan includes space for every unique soul and nation. The Torah serves as a guiding light for all. It is not a system to be replaced or completed by later additions.

Footnotes / Sources

  1. Rico Cortes, “The Covenant of Passover,” Wisdom in Torah Ministries.
  2. Exodus 8:26 and Rashi on “to’evah.”
  3. Rambam, Mishneh Torah, Laws of Passover Offerings.
  4. Bill Cloud, Esau Rising and Glenn Beck podcast discussion (March 2026).
  5. Rabbi Ephraim Palvanov, “Understanding Edom” series.
  6. FamilyTreeDNA documentation on the Cohen Modal Haplotype (J1-P58); studies, including Hammer et al. (2009), report ~46% prevalence among Cohanim.
  7. Haplogroup E-M2 distribution: predominant in West/Central Africa (70-97% in many populations), common in African American lines.
  8. Black Sea deluge hypothesis (Ryan & Pitman, ~7,600–8,800 years ago).
  9. Deuteronomy 32:7.
  10. Personal experiences and communications.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

The Tree of Life: Why Christianity Should Come Home: The Real Sin of Sodom and the Path Back to the Tree of Life

There is a profound Jewish teaching that reveals the biggest difference between the Torah’s worldview and the Christian narrative of sin and redemption.

It begins in the Garden of Eden.

When Adam and Eve are banished, God stations cherubim with a flaming sword that turns every way (mitahapechet) to guard the path to the Tree of Life (Genesis 3:24). The Torah does not say the Tree of Life was destroyed. It says the path to it was guarded. That path was never removed — it was protected.

Rabbi David Fohrman points out that the Torah deliberately echoes this same language in the story of Sodom (Parashat Vayera). The destruction of Sodom contains eight precise parallels to the banishment from Eden:

  • Sending out a hand (shalach yad) to grab something
  • Being sent out of one’s home
  • The word mikedem (from the east)
  • A garden-like setting
  • Angels
  • Divine fire
  • The verb mitahapechet (turned over / reversed)
  • And the eighth: guarding “the path” (derech) — in Eden to the Tree of Life, in Sodom to “the path of God, to do righteousness and justice” (tzedakah u’mishpat).

The Torah is telling us something powerful: Sodom is what happens when a society loses the path to the Tree of Life.

Sodom

Sodom had rules. It had order. It had justice (mishpat). But it had no tzedakah — no compassion, no care for the stranger, no regard for the vulnerable. They institutionalized evil. Their “justice” was to rape and rob guests so no outsiders would enter their paradise. When a society loses the balance between justice and kindness, it becomes Sodom — and it must be destroyed.

The path to the Tree of Life is not a yellow brick road. It is the lifelong conversation with God about how to live tzedakah u’mishpat — doing what is right and what is just, even when they are in tension.

Christianity tells a different story.

Inherited Sin Nature Original Sin

It says Adam and Eve ate from the Tree of Knowledge and brought sin and death into the world. Because of that original sin, humanity is fallen and needs a savior. Jesus dies to pay the penalty, and through faith in him we regain access to eternal life — the Tree of Life.

But the Torah never says Adam’s sin doomed all humanity to spiritual death. It never says we lost the Tree of Life forever. It says the path to it was guarded. And Proverbs 3:18 tells us exactly where that path is:

“She [the Torah] is a Tree of Life to those who grasp her, and whoever holds onto her is happy.”

The Tree of Life was never taken away. It was given to us at Sinai. Every time we study Torah, struggle with its commandments, and try to live tzedakah u’mishpat, we are walking the guarded path back to the Tree of Life.

Eat Freely Eat From All The Trees

Adam and Eve were not commanded to stay away from the Tree of Life forever. They were given a choice — and they chose knowledge over life. But God did not abandon them to eternal death. He gave them clothing, He gave them children, and ultimately He gave their descendants the Torah — the true Tree of Life.

Christianity’s need for Jesus as the solution to original sin only makes sense if you accept that Adam’s sin created a debt that no human being can repay. The Torah does not teach that. It teaches that we are not fallen beyond repair. We are distant, but the path is still open. Every generation can choose to walk it.

The Tree is For all Of Humanity.

That is why Judaism does not need a savior who dies for our sins. We already have the antidote. It is in our hands every time we open the Torah.

The real sin of Sodom was not just sexual violence. It was the complete loss of tzedakah — the refusal to care for the stranger, the vulnerable, the guest. When a society institutionalizes cruelty and calls it justice, it destroys itself.

The path back is still there. It is the path of Torah. It is the path of doing what is right and what is just.

And that path leads to the Tree of Life.

Call to Action: If this teaching resonates with you, subscribe for more explorations of the Torah’s deepest lessons. What part of the Eden or Sodom story has stayed with you the most? Share in the comments.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Chapter 1: To Work and to Safeguard the Garden (The Tree of Life – A Blog Series)

The Lost Journal: Miracles in the Bible: Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden

To work and to safeguard and toil in this world.The Torah doesn’t start with thunder or miracles. It starts quietly: God places Adam in the Garden of Eden “to work it and to safeguard it” (Genesis 2:15). No lounging. No endless vacation. Even paradise had a job—le’ovdah u’leshomrah. Serve it, protect it. Before any fruit, before any snake, humanity’s first assignment is partnership: tend what’s good, guard against harm.

Rabbi David Fohrman: Does the Torah Teach Science? - 18Forty

Rabbi David Fohrman teaches us to read with fresh eyes. In his series A Book Like No Other, he says start with the “big internal questions”—the ones the text begs us to ask, the ones that if unanswered, wreck the whole story. Not “how does a snake talk?” (that’s external, miracle stuff). But: Why put a forbidden tree in perfection? Why two trees—one of Knowledge, one of Life—with no obvious link? Why does Eve add “don’t even touch it” when God never said that? And after eating, why does God say, “Man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil” (Genesis 3:22)—almost agreeing with the snake?

These aren’t plot holes. They’re invitations. The Torah isn’t hiding; it’s provoking: Who are we, really?

The Nachash

The snake—nachash—kicks it off. Not a cartoon villain with horns. Just an animal, but weirdly human. It walks upright (pre-curse), talks casually (no miracle like Balaam’s donkey), eats delicacies (not dust yet), and is “more cunning” than any beast. Arum—cunning. But the same word describes Adam and Eve: arummim, naked. Transparent, what-you-see-is-what-you-get. Cunning and naked? Opposites. Yet Torah uses one root. Why? The snake’s argument is tricky—it reminds Eve of the rule, then flips it: “Even if God said don’t eat… so what?” Not seduction by Apple. More like: rebel anyway. But naked too—raw, exposing desire without layers.

If you listed human traits—upright, speech, smarts, taste—the snake checks every box. So what’s the difference? Nothing obvious. Fohrman leaves it hanging: the nachash forces us to ask, “What makes us human?” Judaism says it’s the yetzer hara—the evil inclination—not external evil, but inner shine. The drive to acquire, know, and be more. Like Cain (Kayin—from qanah, to get, possess, build cities). Abel (Hevel—breath, mist, vanity). One grabs; one flows. The snake whispers: “Acquire it—why wait?”

Torah: The Psychology Of The Mind

Male and Female Adam and Eve
Male and Female Adam and Eve

Dr. Iain McGilchrist’s The Master and His Emissary asks: Why split the brain? Right side—holistic, alive to wonder. Left—narrow, tool-focused, grabs details. Why not one mind? Genesis hints: we’re built for tension. Snake as left-brain run amok—shiny logic over soul. God could’ve made us seamless. Instead, duality—like male/female, tov/ra. Psychology in the text: Eden’s lab, snake’s experiment.

But here’s the twist: Hashem didn’t want obedience or godhood. He wanted a relationship. Not rules first—closeness. Fohrman says Eden was “pre-conceptual bond”: hear the voice (not words), feel presence. Every tree says “thank Me”—eating becomes love. The command? Generosity with boundaries. Choice blooms from trust.

They ate because they wanted “insight… with no effort, just the fruit,” Rabbi Warren Goldstein says in his Tzav talk. Shortcut. God said no—because real growth? Struggle. “You have to toil… through the sweat of your brow.” Exile? Mercy. “This is why He had to send them out… so they would not eat from the Tree of Life and remain in this condition forever.” Not punishment—protection. Lock in shame, brokenness, eternal freeze? No. Work forces dependence: rain, food, kids—turn to Hashem. Build wisdom through sweat, not magic.

The Curse: No Prayer – No Cling- The World is Bliss

Rabbi Tovia Singer Shocks New Testament Scholars with Septuagint Revelation!

Rabbi Tovia Singer flips the serpent’s curse: “Everything will taste like dust… food’s everywhere… he never needs God.” Irony—abundance as poison. No prayer, no cling. Egypt’s Nile: reliable, no rain needed. Israel’s land: barren—pray or starve. Humanity’s “curse”? Toil that pulls us back. Snake sold independence; God wants partnership.

So the Tree of Life? Not fairy-tale immortality. It’s a sustained connection—guarded till we mature. Cherubim, flaming sword—not cruelty. Kindness: earn it through choice, labor, teshuva. Return starts pre-conceptual: hear His voice, cling like He’s your life (Deuteronomy 30:20). Love over knowledge. God circumcises hearts for love; rejoices over us.

Who are we? Not snakes—cunning without soul. Not gods—grabbing without gratitude. Partners: work the garden we lost, safeguard what we can. The Torah’s lesson? Psychology of desire, life as growth, closeness through struggle. No inherited sin needing blood. Just: draw near, choose love, hear the voice.

The snake’s question lingers: What’s the difference? Maybe none—if we stay shiny, self-sufficient. But God says: toil. Depend. Return. That’s the path back.

  • Eden in harmony—Adam/Eve tending, animals everywhere:

biblicalmiracles.blogspot.com

The Lost Journal: Miracles in the Bible: Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden

  • Classic paradise, vibrant and active:

worldhistory.substack.com

The Garden of Our Dreams – by George Dillard

  • Rabbi Goldstein lecturing—warm, direct: (Use one from earlier searches if needed; imagine him mid-Tzav talk.)
  • Fohrman explaining—thoughtful, engaging:

18forty.org

Rabbi David Fohrman: Does the Torah Teach Science? – 18Forty

  • Divided brain—Master vs. Emissary:

cbc.ca

Neuroscientist argues the left side of our brains has taken over our minds | CBC Radio

  • Singer intense—on the curse:

youtube.com

Hazan Gavriel ben David