All posts by adongabriel

Where’s Your Cyrus? – Trump as God’s Tool, Not the King

Chapter Seven: Where’s Your Cyrus? – Trump as God’s Tool, Not the King

I was floating in the hot tub again, water still warm from the afternoon sun, stars just starting to pop out overhead. I’d just finished rewatching Rabbi Palvanov’s second lecture—Trump, Iran & the Year of the Horse—and everything clicked into place like the last piece of a puzzle I’d been staring at for months. This isn’t some random guy who happened to win an election.

This is Cyrus 2.0, straight out of Isaiah 45. You know the verse: “Thus says the Lord to His anointed, to Cyrus, whose right hand I have held—to subdue nations before him, to loose the armor of kings, to open before him the double doors so that the gates will not be shut.” That word “anointed”? It’s mashiach in Hebrew—the exact same word we use for Messiah.

A Persian king who didn’t even know the God of Israel, yet God called him by name, girded him, and used him to smash Babylon, free the Jewish people, and lay the foundation for the Second Temple. Not the final redeemer. Just a tool. And right now, in real time, Trump is doing the same thing—right in front of our eyes.

The Zohar Volume III 212b

The Zohar lays it out plain as day in volume III, page 212b. A fiery comet—the Star of Jacob—rises on the twenty-fifth of Elul. That was September twenty-seventh, twenty twenty-four, a Friday night. It blazes visibly for seventy days. During that exact window, a “great and powerful king” arises—haughty, full of “hot spirit,” ruling over other kings, issuing wild decrees, tormenting nations, and sparking great wars.

Kings fight kings. Structures fall. Ishmael’s wild dominion begins to crack. Then the star fades, and a massive political earthquake shakes the Holy Land. Rabbi Palvanov connects every dot: the comet peaked exactly on the twenty-fifth of Elul. Seventy days later? Around December sixth. Assad flees Damascus on December eighth, twelve hours off. That’s the quake the Zohar described: the old regime collapses, the palace is looted, rebels dance in the streets, and the whole region starts to tremble.

Trump is the one with that hotty spirit. Reelected in November twenty twenty-four, right in the middle of the comet’s seventy-day window. Sworn in January twenty twenty-five. By June twenty twenty-five, Israeli jets hit Iran’s Fordo nuclear site—forty percent of the centrifuges were wrecked in a single night. He threatens to bomb Colombia over drugs, annex Greenland if they don’t cooperate, and take Canada or Panama if they push back.

He renames the Department of Defense the “Department of War.” That’s not humble. That’s fiery. And the gematria? Trump’s name equals three hundred thirty. Armilus—the ancient end-times villain—equals three hundred thirty-one. Add one divine yud, and it becomes three hundred forty. That equals “triumph” and also “Paras”—Persia. Iran neutralized. Exactly like Cyrus: a tool, not the final king.

The Star Of Jacob Bilam’s Prophecy

Let’s walk through the wins that have already stacked up since the comet, because these aren’t theories—they’re footage. September twenty-seventh, twenty twenty-four: the comet peaks bright over Israel, and the same day, eighty bunker-busters collapse three buildings on Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut. Amos 1:4 fire devours the house of Ben-Hadad. December eighth, twenty twenty-four: Assad flees Damascus after eleven days of rebel advances.

The palace is ransacked—furniture flying out windows, portraits shredded, people taking selfies on the dictator’s throne. August 20, 2025: Israeli strikes kill the Houthi prime minister in Yemen. October twenty twenty-five: their top general dies from wounds sustained in earlier attacks. Throughout twenty twenty-five and early twenty twenty-six: Fordo nuclear site degraded, Hezbollah’s arsenal cut by seventy percent, Yemen’s Red Sea threats silenced, Somalia and Iraq terror networks hit, Venezuela’s regime squeezed with new sanctions.

Then February fourth, twenty twenty-six: Netanyahu sits down with Trump at the White House. The agenda? Iran deadlines—make a deal or face consequences. Israel gets the green light for whatever comes next. Every single one of these lines up with the Zohar’s description of a haughty king stirring wars while Ishmael’s grip slips.

October 7th Simchat Torah

The Vilna Gaon adds another layer. He taught that Gog and Magog’s war kicks off in Tishrei—right around Sukkot. October seventh, twenty twenty-three, Simchat Torah, was the spark. Daniel twelve eleven gives us the timeline: twelve hundred ninety years from the abomination on the Temple Mount—the Dome of the Rock, completed six hundred ninety-two CE—lands at nineteen eighty-two. Add the forty-five years from Daniel twelve twelve, and you land at twenty twenty-seven, the Year of the Horse. Fire horse, like Elijah’s chariot. Even Muhammad’s Buraq, the flying horse of Islamic tradition, is borrowed from Talmudic imagery—another political claim on the Temple Mount that’s now unraveling in real time.

Christians look at this and say, “Jesus already fulfilled Zechariah nine nine—He rode the donkey on Palm Sunday.” Sure, He did. But Zechariah nine ten says immediately after that the chariots are cut off, the war horses are gone, the battle bow is broken, and He speaks peace from sea to sea. That didn’t happen. Rome kept rolling. Wars kept raging. So you split the prophecy: verse nine, first coming, verse ten, second coming. Revelation’s white horse rider. But where’s the comet in your timeline? Where’s the seventy-day window? Where’s the haughty king with hotty spirit stirring wars right now while the comet is still fresh in memory? Perry Stone and the big prophecy channels talk about coalitions and Armageddon, but they miss the tool—the Cyrus figure—God uses first to loosen the armor of kings before the humble donkey king arrives.

Messiah- Moshaich-Trump

I asked my elders, exactly like Deuteronomy commands. They opened Isaiah forty-five and showed me: Cyrus frees the Jews, rebuilds the Temple, hands over treasures of darkness. Trump is enabling the strikes that weaken Iran, expose the gold bunkers in Lebanon, and set the stage for what’s coming. Not Messiah. Just the tool. My Kohen grandfather’s bloodline taught me that—God uses whoever He wants, whenever He wants.

So hey—Christian friend, Messianic brother—Trump is moving exactly like Cyrus: Iran pressured, proxies falling, Netanyahu shaking hands with him on February fourth, twenty twenty-six, while Iran’s economy chokes under new sanctions. Where’s your prophecy that flagged a haughty tool right now—fiery spirit, stirring wars, weakening Persia—while the Star of Jacob was still visible? Ours had the dates, the spirit, the strikes, the gematria. You waited for a second coming. We watched it play out in real time.

This isn’t theory. History is footage. This is history. This is the album we didn’t lend—and it’s playing loud. The humble king on the donkey is next. Are you ready?

Hazan Gavriel ben David

The Land as Dowry – Why Shabbat and Canaan Prove God Married Israel (Not the Church)

The Tree Of Life

The Tree Of Life

Let’s start where the Torah starts: Eden. Adam wakes up in a garden God Himself planted (Genesis 2:8), not floating in heaven. Not a metaphor. Real soil. “YHVH Elokim planted a garden in Eden, eastward, and placed there the man whom He had formed.” Adam’s first job? “To work it and to guard it” (Genesis 2:15). That’s not punishment — that’s partnership. The land is his inheritance, his dowry, tied directly to his body and to the wife God builds from his side. No land, no marriage. No soil, no “one flesh.” Ultimately, Eden’s narrative displays the concept of land as dowry from the start.

This is the pattern the Torah keeps repeating. God doesn’t create floating souls. He creates a people on a specific piece of ground. That ground is part of the covenant vows, and serves as the land as dowry for the bride.

The Second Adam – Noah

Now watch the flood — the greatest reset button in history. Genesis 8:1 says, “God caused a wind to pass over the earth, and the waters subsided.” Same Hebrew word — ruach — that hovered over the waters in Genesis 1:2. The spirit of God hovers again. The waters split again. Dry land appears again. It’s Day 1-3 on replay. Creation 2.0. And so, dry land is not just a feature—it’s God’s gift of land as dowry anew to humanity after the flood.

And what does God give Noah the moment he steps onto dry ground? A rainbow. “I set My bow in the cloud… it shall be a sign of the covenant between Me and the earth” (Genesis 9:13). Seven colors. Seven days. The rabbis have always seen the rainbow as the Shabbat sign — the weekly reminder that God finished creation and rested. The flood didn’t just save Noah. It reminded the whole world: the land comes back, and so does rest.

This is where Christianity usually gets uncomfortable. “Shabbat is only for Jews,” they say. Or rabbis sometimes say, “Noahides don’t need to keep Shabbat.” But that’s not what the Torah teaches. Shabbat is Noah’s heritage. It’s universal rest. The rainbow covenant is given to “all flesh” (Genesis 9:17) — every living thing on the land. Rest isn’t Jewish-only. It’s human-first. Noah walked the path before Abraham, before Sinai, before any “Jewish” label existed.

Recreation: The New Seven Days of Creation

Rabbi Katz (in his old lectures, many of us grew up with) ties it perfectly to the rhythm of creation. The same ruach that hovered over the waters in Genesis 1 hovers again after the flood. Two separations of waters. The same dry land. The same command to be fruitful on that land. And the same rest. Shabbat is baked into Noah’s covenant the same way it’s baked into Adam’s garden. Christians who love Charlie Kirk’s call for truth — this is your heritage too. You don’t have to convert to keep the day God made holy for all men. It’s returning to the tents of Abraham, not replacing Israel.

Rashi brings it home right at the beginning. Bereshit — “for the sake of Israel God created heaven and earth.” The very first verse isn’t “In the beginning.” It’s “For the sake of the firstfruits — Israel.” And that includes the land. Creation itself has one purpose: Israel on her soil. No land, no bride. No Canaan, no covenant. The dowry isn’t optional. It’s the ring on her finger. Clearly, the theme of land as dowry is woven into the entire biblical narrative.

Finding A Bride And A Land

Look at Abraham. He’s standing on the very land God just promised. Genesis 15 ends with those borders — “from the river of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates.” That’s not spiritual. That’s GPS coordinates. The same land Adam worked becomes the land Abraham’s seed will inherit. The split animals in Genesis 15? They’re the wedding canopy. God walks between them. The torch passes. The dowry is signed. Essentially, this passage illustrates the enduring theme: land as dowry for Abraham’s descendants is the physical basis of the covenant.

This is why replacement theology falls apart the moment you read the text with open eyes. Christians say, “The church is the new Israel — spiritual only.” But the Torah keeps saying dirt. Real dirt. Promised dirt. You can’t have a marriage without a home. You can’t have a bride without the land God swore to give her seed.

And that seed? DNA backs it. The J1 haplogroup and Cohen Modal Haplotype — the markers trace straight back to Abraham through Isaac and Jacob. Only Jews and Arabs carry that signature at those levels. No European branch. No “spiritual” takeover. God wrote the evidence in our blood the same way He wrote the borders in the Torah. The land as dowry isn’t poetic. Biological and DNA proof. It’s the covenantal. It’s forever.

My Bar Mitzva Torah Portion

Your Bar Mitzvah portion — Vayakhel and Pekudei — screams the same truth. “And he gathered” the people and commanded Shabbat first (Exodus 35:2). Then they brought the Tabernacle, and Moshe blessed them (Exodus 39:43). Built. Finished. Rested.

That’s the pattern: gather on the land, keep Shabbat, receive the blessing. That’s been my cry since 2001, when I discovered my Cohen line. Not to exclude — to invite. Christians who are hungry for truth, this is your invitation. Shabbat isn’t a Jewish club. It’s the weekly rainbow over the land God gave His bride, symbolising land as dowry throughout history.

The flood showed us the reset. The rainbow showed us the sign. The land shows us the dowry. And the bride? Still Israel. People and soil together. No swap. No upgrade. Just the original covenant, the Torah has been shouting since Genesis 1:1 — “For the sake of Israel.”

This is the third layer that the Torah unveils. The sleep binds us. The split makes us one. The land seals the marriage. And the rest? That weekly Shabbat rest is the proof that God never divorced His bride — He’s still waiting for the world to come home to the rhythm He set from the very beginning.

Ready for Chapter 4? The twelve witnesses in the Prophets who all call Israel God’s wife by name. No metaphors for the church. Just straight Torah truth.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

The Split—The Wound That Heals

The Split—The Deep Sleep Connection

If Chapter 1 was the dream, Chapter 2 is the scar. And here’s the twist the Torah wants you to see: the scar isn’t a flaw—it’s the marriage.

We left Adam in a deep sleep. God reaches in and literally rips a piece out of his side—bone, flesh, blood. No warning, no apology, no anesthesia. Then He builds Chava from that piece. When Adam wakes up, he doesn’t complain. He’s grateful. “This time it is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh!” (Genesis 2:23). The pain is gone. The loneliness is gone. The gap is filled. One flesh. One body. One covenant.

Now zoom out. Genesis 1 isn’t random background noise. Look at the pattern God sets from the very first days of creation. Day 2: “Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it separate between water and water” (Genesis 1:6). God splits the waters—upper from lower. Day 3: He gathers the lower waters so dry land appears. Separation, then unity. Creation’s very first act after light is division. Not chaos. Design. God tears the world apart so it can come together in a more perfect way.

The Sign of Marriage

Rabbi David Fohrman loves this pattern. He says the Torah is obsessed with splitting because marriage itself requires it. You cannot unite what was never divided. Adam’s rib isn’t theft—it’s surgery performed by the divine Surgeon. Abraham’s animals in Genesis 15 aren’t butchery—they’re wedding vows written in blood and fire.

Watch Genesis 15:10: “He took all these to him, and he cut them in the middle, and he laid each piece opposite its fellow.” Same Hebrew verb as Adam’s side—ba-tar, to cut or split. Then in verse 17, the smoking oven and flaming torch pass between the pieces. God Himself walks the aisle—literally—through the split. No blood on His hands. No curse. Just promise: “To your seed I have given this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates” (Genesis 15:18).

The wound heals. The bride forms.

But here is what Christianity almost always misses: the split is not sin. It is sacred. Many Christians read Genesis 3—the serpent, the fruit, the curse—and immediately think “the fall of man.” Adam punished, Eve blamed, the whole world broken forever. But the Torah never once uses the word “sin” (chet) in that chapter. It simply says, “You will toil… you will give birth in pain… you will return to dust” (Genesis 3:16-19). Hardship? Yes. Consequences? Absolutely. But not eternal damnation. Not original sin that damns every baby born. Not a cosmic divorce.

Eve The Hero of Genesis

Rashi explains the serpent was jealous, not Satan incarnate—just a clever tempter. Eve listens, questions, eats, and gives to Adam. Adam eats too. No blame game from God. He simply asks, “Where are you?” (Genesis 3:9)—not to punish, but to call them back into relationship. Then He makes clothes for them. He covers their shame. Like a husband after an argument who still says, “I love you. Let’s keep going.”

The real story is division leading to reunion. Eve is the hero—not because she is perfect, but because she steps up. She sees the fruit, she engages with the question, she chooses. Adam follows. Together they leave Eden—but they are not abandoned. God stations cherubim to guard the way back (Genesis 3:24). The split is temporary. The marriage is eternal.

Fohrman ties it straight to Abraham. The animals are split, but God does the walking between the pieces. Same as Eden—God splits, God mends. The bride is not Eve alone. She is the nation that comes from Abraham’s side. “Your seed” (Genesis 15:13) = the children of the wound. And the land? Not optional. Eden’s garden becomes Canaan’s borders. “From the river of Egypt to the Euphrates” is the dowry. You cannot have a marriage without a home. Christians love to say “spiritual kingdom,” but the Torah keeps saying dirt—real, physical, promised dirt.

What Christians Do To Our Family History

Think about the rhythm. Adam is alone in paradise and needs a helper opposite him. God splits him and creates Eve. Abraham is alone in Canaan and needs heirs. God splits the animals and creates Israel. The same rhythm. Same God. Same pattern.

So why do so many Christians flip the story into “original sin”? Because they stop at Genesis 3 and read it as punishment instead of process. But the Torah keeps going: “Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and cleave to his wife, and they shall become one flesh” (Genesis 2:24). Leave. Cleave. Become one. That is not a fall. That is growth—painful, necessary growth. Like birth.

Eve becomes the hero because she gives birth to the line. Her first words after leaving the garden are not shame. They are grateful: “I have gotten a man with Hashem’s help” (Genesis 4:1). And Abraham? Same pattern. “Who will inherit me?” he cries. God answers, “Not a servant—your own seed.” Then, deep sleep. A split that brings a bride. Then the promise of land and generations. The wound heals and brings a marriage. The bride wakes up.

The Vows Were Spoken At Sinai

Christians, Paul quotes “one flesh” in Ephesians 5:31 and says the mystery is Christ and the church. But he skips the land. He skips the split. He skips over the fact that the bride is Israel. You are not wrong to love the metaphor. You are simply late to the wedding. The vows were spoken at Sinai. The ring is Canaan. The groom never left His bride.

The split is not a sin. It is love. God tears in order to heal. He divides in order to marry. And the hero? The one formed from the wound. Eve. Israel. The bride.

This is the second layer that the Torah unveils. The sleep binds us. The split makes us one. And the land? That’s coming next—the dowry that proves the marriage is real, physical, and forever.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Abraham’s Children: India, Israel, and the Family We Still Share

Paradesi Synagogue - Wikipedia
Paradesi Synagogue – Wikipedia

When Modi Said “Hearts Broke”

Abraham’s Children From the Keturah

When Modi said” Hearts Broke”. I remember the moment vividly. It was just a few days ago, on February 25, 2026, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed Israel’s Knesset. His words weren’t just diplomatic rhetoric—they carried the weight of shared history, deep empathy, and an unbreakable bond. Standing there, with his voice steady yet laced with emotion, he said something that pierced right through me: “When the tragedy of October seventh occurred, 1.4 billion Indians—1.8 million of them Jewish—felt your pain. Their hearts broke with yours.”

Those weren’t empty words. Not sympathy scripted for the cameras. Not mere diplomacy. Hearts broke. It was as if Modi were speaking from personal loss, as if India itself had been wounded that day. And in a way, it had. When Hamas launched its brutal attack on October 7, 2023, the world watched in horror. But for Indians, it wasn’t distant news. Temples across the country lit candles in solidarity.

Abraham Our Father

Streets in Delhi filled with marches, blue-and-white flags waving alongside the tricolor. In Cochin’s ancient synagogues, Hebrew prayers echoed louder, blending with the calls of muezzins and temple bells. The 1.8 million Jews living in India—descendants of ancient migrations—didn’t just mourn; they grieved as a family. And the rest of the nation joined them, proving that bonds forged over millennia don’t fade with time.

This wasn’t new. India’s response to October 7 was immediate and heartfelt. Protests erupted in major cities, with thousands condemning the violence. Social media buzzed with #StandWithIsrael hashtags, and even Bollywood stars voiced support. But Modi’s words in the Knesset elevated it all. He didn’t stop at grief; he wove it into a tapestry of connection, reminding us that India and Israel aren’t just allies—they’re kin. This speech, delivered on a historic visit, also highlighted personal ties. Modi shared how he was born on September 17, 1950—the very day India formally recognized Israel as a state. “I always felt drawn to this land,” he said, his eyes reflecting a lifetime of affinity.

That pull isn’t coincidental. It’s rooted in something ancient, something that predates modern borders and politics. As a Jew, hearing Modi speak felt like rediscovering a long-lost relative. Our traditions, both Indian and Jewish, whisper of shared origins. We’re not strangers separated by oceans; we’re cousins, branches from the same tree. And that tree? It starts with Abraham.

The Abraham Thread

Let’s go back to the source. In the Book of Genesis, Abraham—our patriarch—stands as a central figure, a man whose legacy spans civilizations. He fathered Isaac, from whom the Jewish people descend. Ishmael, his firstborn, became the ancestor of many Arab nations. But there’s a third branch often overlooked: Keturah’s sons. After Sarah’s death, Abraham married Keturah, and they had six children: Zimran, Jokshan, Medan, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah. Genesis 25:6 tells us Abraham gave them gifts and sent them eastward, away from Isaac, to a land in the east.

What were those gifts? The Torah doesn’t specify in detail, but rabbinic traditions suggest they included spiritual wisdom, perhaps even esoteric knowledge. Some midrashim hint that these sons carried Abraham’s monotheistic ideals to distant lands, influencing cultures far beyond the Middle East. And where did they go? Eastward—to what we now call India. Ancient Jewish texts and Indian folklore echo this migration.

For instance, some scholars link Keturah’s descendants to the Brahmins, suggesting shared rituals such as fire ceremonies and veneration of elders. Jews bless bread on Shabbat; Hindus perform aarti with flames. We bow to our sages; Indians touch the feet of their gurus. These aren’t coincidences—they’re echoes of a common root.

Ethics of the Fathers

Modi touched on this without quoting scripture. He spoke of ancient civilizations understanding humanity as one family, every person made in God’s image. It’s a core Jewish value—b’tzelem Elohim—mirrored in Indian philosophy’s vasudhaiva kutumbakam, the world as one family. But science is now catching up to these traditions.

Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson’s groundbreaking book, Traced: Human DNA’s Big Surprise (available at https://answersingenesis.org/store/product/traced/), delves into Y-chromosome DNA, the genetic marker passed from father to son. Jeanson, a Harvard-trained biologist, analyzed global DNA data and found that all modern humans trace back to three primary male lineages—a genetic bottleneck that aligns strikingly with the biblical account of Noah’s three sons: Shem, Ham, and Japhet.

From these three “fathers,” humanity branched out after the Flood, with Abraham’s line fitting into Shem’s descendants. Jeanson’s work isn’t just theology; it’s data-driven. He maps mutations in Y-DNA haplogroups, showing rapid diversification around 4,500 years ago, matching biblical timelines.

For India and Israel, this means our peoples aren’t just culturally linked—we’re genetically cousins, separated by a father and perhaps two uncles in the vast human family tree. When Modi said, “Like Jews, we Indians understand that we are all one family,” he was echoing both scripture and science. It’s a reminder that in our DNA, borders dissolve.

Indian Cavalry

Haifa: Blood on the Same Sand

But history isn’t just abstract lineages; it’s written in blood and bravery. Modi didn’t shy away from that. In his speech, he evoked a chapter from World War I that binds our nations: the Battle of Haifa in 1918. “During the First World War, more than four thousand Indian soldiers laid down their lives in this region,” he said. “The cavalry charge at Haifa in September nineteen-eighteen remains a significant chapter in military history.”

Let’s unpack that chapter. On September 23, 1918, as part of the larger Battle of Megiddo, the 15th (Imperial Service) Cavalry Brigade—comprising the Jodhpur Lancers, Mysore Lancers, and Hyderabad Lancers—faced Ottoman and German forces entrenched on Mount Carmel. The Ottomans held Haifa, a strategic port, with machine guns, artillery, and fortified positions. Under British General Edmund Allenby, the Indian troops were tasked with capturing it. Armed mostly with lances and swords—no tanks, no air support—they charged uphill against modern firepower.

“Hero of Haifa” Like Abraham and Eliezer

It was, historians agree, the last great cavalry charge in military history. The Jodhpur Lancers, led by Major Thakur Dalpat Singh—later dubbed the “Hero of Haifa”—spearheaded the assault. Crossing the Acre railway and navigating quicksand along the Kishon River, they maneuvered to the mountain’s lower slopes.

Dalpat Singh fell to machine-gun fire while wheeling his regiment, but his men pressed on, overwhelming the defenders in under an hour. The Mysore Lancers flanked from the east and north, storming the town. Casualties were light by war standards: eight Indians killed, 34 wounded, 60 horses dead, 83 injured. Yet they captured 1,350 prisoners, along with guns and supplies. Haifa was liberated, turning the tide in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign.

This painting captures the charge’s intensity—turbaned riders, lances high, galloping through dust and fire.

And here, Indian troops enter Haifa post-victory, a black-and-white testament to their valor.

Modi’s 2017 visit to the Haifa cemetery, where he laid a wreath, underscored this. “I was deeply moved,” he recalled in the Knesset. It echoes Genesis 14, where Abraham, with Eliezer and 318 men, raided five kings to rescue Lot. No army, just loyalty. When family’s at stake, you charge—be it ancient raiders or 20th-century lancers.

Cities That Remember

India’s Jewish story lives on in its cities, where synagogues stand as bridges between worlds.

Start with Cochin, in Kerala. Home to the oldest Jewish community, dating to 562 BCE or even King Solomon’s era. Traders from Judea arrived in Cranganore, building a thriving port. After the Second Temple’s destruction in 70 CE, more exiles came. They spoke Judeo-Malayalam, blending Hebrew with local tongues. The Paradesi Synagogue, built in 1568 next to the Raja’s palace, features blue-and-white tiles from China, Belgian chandeliers, and a Torah ark draped in red. Today, Shabbat candles flicker beside Diwali lamps, symbolizing harmony.

This interior view shows its ornate beauty—crystals hanging like stars.

“Shanivar Teli” Saturday Oil-Men

Then Mumbai, once Bombay. The Bene Israel, the largest group, trace their roots to a 2nd-century BCE shipwreck on the Konkan coast. They integrated as oil-pressers (“Shanivar Teli”—Saturday oil-men, observing Shabbat). In the 18th century, Baghdadi Jews arrived, fleeing persecution in Iraq and Syria. They built Keneseth Eliyahoo in 1884, with its turquoise walls, stained glass, and golden railings. When October 7 struck, prayers here intensified, echoing global Jewish pain.

Behold its restored grandeur, a fusion of Victorian and Jewish design.

Delhi hosts newer communities, with Chabad houses serving expats and locals. Post-October 7, they glowed with vigils, strangers hugging in solidarity.

Kolkata’s Baghdadi Jews, from the 19th century onward, built synagogues such as Beth El. Bene Israel here, descendants of shipwreck survivors, kept kosher amid bustling markets. Modi’s words resonate: their pain is India’s.

These aren’t museums—they breathe, preserving ties.

Why It Matters Now

In a fractured world—divided by politics, ideology, geography—Modi’s message cuts through: “We understand.” Not from agreements, but memory. When one suffers, the family aches.

India-Israel ties thrive today: defense pacts, tech collaborations, cultural exchanges. But roots run deeper. Abraham’s tents welcomed all; his descendants still do.

So, why does India stand with Israel? Not treaties. Haifa’s dust. Cochin’s candles. 1.4 billion hearts are breaking on October 7.

That’s home.

(For the full speech: Prime Minister’s Address to the Knesset, February 25, 2026 – from India’s Ministry of External Affairs.)

The Sleep That Binds A Marriage

Adam and Eve

The Match Maker

The sleep that binds a wedding, Genesis 1 and Genesis 2. You ever feel like the Bible’s hiding something? Like it’s whispering secrets you can’t quite hear? That’s how I felt for years—until Rabbi David Fohrman showed me the trick. He calls it “stereo vision.” Take two stories that look unrelated—Genesis 1-2 and Genesis 15—and play them at the same time. Suddenly, the Torah stops being flat. It starts breathing.

Think of it this way: Genesis 1 is the big-screen version. God—called Elokim—speaks, and the universe snaps into place. Light, sky, land, seas, animals, humans. Six days. Done. It’s majestic, almost military: “Let there be… and there was.” No mess, no emotion. Just power.

Then Genesis 2 flips the camera. Now it’s YHVH Elokim—the personal name, the God who walks in gardens. No commands. Just hands in the dirt, shaping Adam from dust like He’s sculpting clay. He plants Eden, breathes life into nostrils, and puts man in charge. Feels slower. More tender.

Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 The Marriage

On the surface? Clash. One’s a blueprint, the other’s a love letter. Christians read it and say, “See? Two sources—two authors.” Rabbis used to argue about it, too. But Fohrman doesn’t buy that. He says, “The Torah isn’t sloppy. It’s layered—like an ancient book no one knew was there.” And the key? A single verse: Genesis 2:4—”These are the generations of heaven and earth when they were created.”

That word “generations”—toledot—it’s not just history. It’s family. Heaven and earth aren’t rocks and sky—they’re parents. God? He’s the matchmaker. Not barking orders from afar, but hanging around, helping them birth the world. Fohrman calls it “facilitation.” Like a father who sets up the room before the kids arrive. Genesis 1 is the announcement. Genesis 2 is the wedding.

And right there, in Genesis 2, we get the first hint: marriage isn’t optional. Adam’s alone. God says, “It is not good for man to be alone” (2:18). He parades animals—no match. Then—tardema. Deep sleep. The word’s rare. Only twice in the whole Torah. God puts Adam under, takes his side, and builds Chava. “Bone of my bones, flesh of my flesh” (2:23). One flesh. One body. One family.

Genesis 15: The Wedding, The Land, The Offspring

Now jump to Genesis 15. Abraham’s wrestling with no heir. God says, “Look at the stars—your children.” Abraham asks, “How?” God says, “Take animals.” Abraham cuts them in half. Then—tardema again. Same word. Deep sleep falls. Dread. Darkness. God speaks: “Your descendants will be slaves 400 years… but they’ll come out with wealth. And this land—from the river to the river—yours.”

Fohrman says: “Two links at first. Then it explodes.” Here’s the six strongest—straight from the text, no stretch:

  1. Tardema—only in these spots. God-induced, not natural. Like a divine reset button.
  2. Division—Adam’s rib split (2:21); animals halved (15:10). Same verb: “ba-tar,” to cut.
  3. No suitable partner—Adam names animals, finds none (2:18-20); Abraham says, “My heir’s a servant” (15:3). Both lonely, both waiting.
  4. Sleep to divine voice—Adam hears God before waking; Abraham hears promises mid-dread (15:13-16). God talks when the world’s quiet.
  5. Awakening to fulfillment—Adam opens eyes, sees Eve; Abraham wakes, gets the covenant. The gap closes.
  6. Land + progeny—Adam tends Eden (2:15); Abraham inherits Canaan, descendants like stars (15:5-7). Marriage needs soil and seed.

A Marriage Made in Heaven

These aren’t coincidences. They’re hyperlinks. The Torah’s saying: “Look—same pattern.” God puts man to sleep, splits him, and builds a partner. Then repeats it with Abraham: sleep, split, builds a nation. One flesh from one man. One people from one covenant.

And the hero? Not Adam. Not Abraham. It’s the one formed from the split. Eve. The nation. The bride.

Christians love Genesis 2:24—”two become one flesh”—and Paul quotes it in Ephesians 5: “This mystery is Christ and the church.” But here’s the thing: Paul didn’t make that up. He pulled it from Torah. And if Genesis 2 is the blueprint—sleep, split, one flesh—then Genesis 15 says: the bride is Israel. The people God split from Abraham’s side. The land He promised as dowry. Not a new “spiritual body.” Rome is not the bride. Gentiles are not the bride.

No Sin and Punishment

So why does Christianity flip it into “fall”? Because they miss the layers. They read surface—sin, serpent, curse—and stop. But the Torah keeps going: “For this reason a man leaves father and mother…” (2:24). It’s not about guilt. It’s about leaving, splitting, coming back—one flesh.

The story isn’t sin and punishment. It’s sleep and promise. Division and reunion. God doesn’t punish Adam—He pauses him, tears him open, makes him whole. Same with Abraham: dread isn’t doom—it’s birth pains. The nation comes out. The bride wakes up.

And that flesh? Israel. The land. The people. From Eden to Canaan. From rib to nation. No one else gets the vows.

Your Place In The Torah

But here’s the gentle part: you’re not shut out, you are the first part of our book. You’re just… early. Like Noah before the Sinai and the children of Israel. Like Abraham before Sinai. The tents are open. The laws—rest, justice, no blood—were yours first. We’re not gatekeeping. We’re reminding.

The Torah’s not hiding. It’s waiting. Overlay the stories. See the sleep that binds. Come and see the split. See the bride. And ask yourself: if the text says Israel… why rewrite it?

The layers are there. Peel them.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Trump Is Rebuilding An American Heritage Returning To God, Family, Country.

Rebellious Son
The Rebellious Son
18 “If a man has a stubborn and rebellious son who will not obey the voice of his father or the voice of his mother, and who, when they have chastened him, will not heed them, 19 then his father and his mother shall take hold of him and bring him out to the elders of his city, to the gate of his city. 20 And they shall say to the elders of his city, ‘This son of ours is stubborn and rebellious; he will not obey our voice; he is a glutton and a drunkard.’ 21 Then all the men of his city shall stone him to death with stones; so you shall put away the evil from among you, and all Israel shall hear and fear.

Trump is helping the whole world turn to God, family and country. Some people talk about Trump turning to God and inspiring others by his example.

Look, I didn’t even know I was Jewish until I was thirty-five. My mom—a Spanish Jew—kept it quiet my whole life. Then, right after 9/11, she drops it on me. I didn’t think twice—I booked a plane to Israel the next year and started my journey home. Christianity? Never clicked. It felt off, like wearing someone else’s shoes. But Torah? That fit.

Now I’m raising daughters who don’t always get why I won’t nod along when some black folks say “victim” every time life hits. Blame’s easy. Building’s hard. That’s why Pastor Otha Turnbough’s interview lit me up—he laid out Trump’s wins I’d already tracked and threw in stuff I’d missed. And then he said it: “Sinners don’t even count—they’re dumb, supposed to be that way.” God ain’t worried. Man, that stung. My heart broke. Nevertheless, the emphasis on Trump turning to God keeps coming up in spiritual conversations.

But first—let’s give him his due. He nailed what Trump did:

Black unemployment dropped to five-point-three percent by twenty-nineteen—lowest ever. Opportunity Zones dumped billions into black and Hispanic neighborhoods—real jobs, homes, businesses popping up. First Step Act? Cut sentences, got folks back on track; black pastors like Darrell Scott said it was straight-up justice.

School choice blew up—twenty-plus states by twenty-twenty-five, vouchers, charters, tax breaks. Florida kids are reading better, and low-income parents are finally calling shots. Parents pick—religious schools, homeschool, whatever. No more bureaucrats running your family. Faith? Black pastors—Paula White, Harry Jackson—are praying right in the White House. Actually, Trump is increasingly seen as turning to God, a perspective shared among leaders and communities.

Pentagon’s doing monthly services now. “America Prays” rededicates us May seventeenth, twenty-twenty-six—like Washington knelt at St. Paul’s after inauguration: “Almighty God, keep us in Thy holy protection.” And Israel? Embassy moved to Jerusalem, Golan Heights ours, Abraham Accords—trade with the UAE and Bahrain up 120%. Three-point-eight billion aid yearly, missile money. Trump’s bombing of Iranian sites—keeping America strong so Israel never stands alone.

Never Say, Your Children Can Never Change.

Pastor, you dared us to challenge you. I’m taking it. Deuteronomy twenty-one—the stubborn son, drunkard, rebel—says bring him to elders, stone him. But our rabbis? Sanhedrin seventy-one: never happened. Not once. Why?

It says for this law to apply the elders must interview the parents to varify that they both are wearing the same cloths and both of them are saying the same words. The court must make sure of this before the court can continue.

If both parents have different cloths and have a different lanuage then the court will advise the parents that they have not taught the son in the same manner and both of them had a diffent language when it came to teaching your son. Your son is confused. It is you who has confused him and he does not know what to do. Also, you have done what no Israelite parent would do. To say that a child was born a certain way and can no change is not how a father and mother should speak to their children. Interestingly, the concept of Trump, turning more toward God, parallels how change is possible for anyone.

Christianity Changed Everything

Pastor, you dared people to push back. I’m pushing. Deuteronomy twenty-one—the stubborn son, drunkard, won’t listen—says take him to the elders, stone him. But our sages in Sanhedrin seventy-one? They say it never happened. Not once. The Rebellious son, steals from parents, drinks wine, eats meat like a beast—while still under their roof—then refuse correction.

Even then? Warnings, more warnings. If parents say, “he’ll never change”? They’re the problem—they confused him, gave up. God doesn’t do despair. Deuteronomy thirty: “I set before you life and death—choose life.” No failure plans. You wander? You’ll hit bumps, sure—but He pulls you back. Rain on time, kids, grandkids, grain in the barn. Real stuff. Every soul’s His. Not just Christians. In addition, Trump turning to God is often a topic among faith communities discussing change and redemption.

Where is the Three days and Three Nights Suffering? Burial? Resurrection?

In Luke Chapter 24  He said to them, “How foolish you are, and how slow to believe all that the prophets have spoken! 26 Did not the Messiah have to suffer these things and then enter his glory?” 27 And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself.

So here’s my question—why Jesus? Not “it feels right”—show me. Luke 24 says the prophets; Psalms, point to him. Okay. But where’s the name? Isaiah fifty-three’s suffering servant? We read that as Israel. Daniel’s son of man? A king, not a crucified god. If every page screams Messiah, why no “he’ll rise on the third day”? Why no blueprint? I’m not mad—I’m asking. Your faith sits on our roots. Let’s dig. Trump’s renewing Washington’s covenant—faith, family, strength. Maybe we renew ours: honest talk, no write-offs. Sinners aren’t dumb. They’re lost. And God’s worried. So am I. Also, did you notice the discussions on Trump turning to God and how it shapes perspectives in America?

Daughters—if you read this someday: I flew to Israel at thirty-five because Torah made sense. No blame. No victim. Just choose life. The bridge is open, pastor. Your move.

Links:

    Hazan Gavriel ben David

    Milestone 10: Joseph’s Third-Day Dreams – Resurrection Prophecy or Narrative Coincidence?

    Joseph and the Cup Barrier and the Baker

    Introduction. This article explores the significance and meaning of Joseph’s third-day resurrection in its historical and theological context.

    Warren Gage’s “Milestones to Emmaus” presents Milestone 10 as another “third day” event, pointing to Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection. In Genesis 40, Joseph interprets dreams for Pharaoh’s cupbearer and baker while imprisoned. Both dreams involve “three” elements, resolved on the third day: the cupbearer restored to life (glory), the baker hanged on a tree (suffering and death).

    Gage frames this as typological, linking Joseph’s story to Christ’s “suffering followed by glory.” He emphasizes Joseph’s innocence, the third-day judgment, and symbolic elements like the baker’s hanging (echoing Deuteronomy 21:23’s “curse”).

    Gage extends this to Joseph’s overall narrative: beloved son betrayed for silver, condemned innocent, exalted to Pharaoh’s right hand. He parallels Jesus: betrayed for silver, innocent suffering, resurrection glory. This fits Gage’s hermeneutical key—Joseph as a “prophetic preview” of Jesus.

    Yet, from a Jewish perspective rooted in the Tanakh’s plain meaning (peshat), this milestone does not prophesy a Messiah’s literal death and third-day resurrection. It’s a story of divine providence, interpretation, and human fate—without resurrection motifs. Let’s break it down.

    The “Third Day” in Genesis 40: Practical Timing, Not Theological Symbolism

    Genesis 40 describes Joseph imprisoned with Pharaoh’s cupbearer and baker. Both dream symbolically: the cupbearer sees a vine with three branches bearing grapes, which he presses into Pharaoh’s cup. The baker sees three baskets of bread on his head, birds eating from the top one.

    Joseph interprets: “The three branches are three days” (v. 12)—Pharaoh will restore the cupbearer. “The three baskets are three days” (v. 18)—Pharaoh will hang the baker. On the third day (Pharaoh’s birthday), it happens: cupbearer freed, baker executed (v. 20-22).

    The “third day” is a logistical device—an ancient Near Eastern convention for timing dreams or events to unfold quickly and build tension. No death-like state for three days; no revival. The cupbearer is “lifted up” (restored), the baker “lifted up” (beheaded and hanged). It’s dual judgment, not collective deliverance.

    Jewish exegesis (Rashi, Ramban) sees this as Joseph’s wisdom from God, highlighting themes of providence and humility. Joseph asks the cupbearer to remember him (v. 14), showing vulnerability. Midrash (Bereishit Rabbah) explores dream symbolism but no resurrection foreshadowing. The third day marks Pharaoh’s feast, not eschatological revival.

    Contrast with Jesus: literal death, burial, bodily rising. Here, no equivalent. The baker’s hanging (v. 22) echoes “cursed on a tree” (Deut 21:23), but it’s a punishment, not an atoning sacrifice. Gage’s typology stretches: Joseph “innocent in the dungeon” = Jesus in the tomb, but Joseph lives through it, no death.

    Joseph as Type of Christ: Creative Parallels, Not Prophetic Necessity

    Gage’s “hermeneutical key” views Joseph’s life as Jesus’ preview: beloved son betrayed for silver (Gen 37:28), condemned innocent (Gen 39:20), exalted to Pharaoh’s right (Gen 41:40). Parallels include Joseph’s coat dipped in blood (Gen 37:31), ruling amid famine (Gen 41:56), providing bread (Gen 47:12).

    Christian typology sees Joseph as a Christ-figure: betrayed by brothers (John 1:11), exalted to save (John 6:51). Gage adds clothing symbolism: multicolored coat (Gen 37:3) to linen robe (Gen 41:42), mirroring Jesus’ blood-dipped robe (Rev 19:13) to golden-sashed one (Rev 1:13).

    Compelling? Yes, for believers. But the Tanakh doesn’t signal this as messianic prophecy. Joseph’s story teaches providence: “You meant evil, God meant good” (Gen 50:20). Jewish tradition (Pirkei Avot) views Joseph as a righteous sufferer, not a future Savior type. Midrash emphasizes his integrity amid temptation (Gen 39), not crucifixion preview.

    Gage’s “Prophet Redivivus” claims Jesus fulfills Joseph’s pattern. But typology is retrospective—New Testament authors apply it post-events, not Tanakh’s intent. Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:4 claims “raised on the third day according to the Scriptures,” but no explicit verse matches. Hosea 6:2 (national revival) or Jonah (deliverance) are closest, but stretched.

    Jewish Interpretation: Judgment and Providence, Not Resurrection

    In Jewish thought, Genesis 40 illustrates dream interpretation as a divine gift (v. 8: “Do not interpretations belong to God?”). Rashi notes Joseph’s boldness yet humility, asking remembrance (v. 14). The third day coincides with Pharaoh’s birthday—narrative irony, life for one, death for another

    Midrash (Tanchuma) explores moral lessons: the cupbearer’s restoration rewards loyalty, and the baker’s death punishes theft. No eschatological hint. Ramban sees Joseph’s plea as a human frailty, contrasting it with God’s timing (forgotten for two years, Gen 41:1).

    Rosh Hashanah ties to judgment themes—the third day as a decision point, like Pharaoh’s feast. But no resurrection. Psalm 51 (David’s “iniquity” confession) connects to personal redemption, recited on High Holidays for introspection, not messianic prophecy.

    Christianity’s Misuse: Typology Over Text

    Gage’s reading imposes the New Testament on the Tanakh, turning narrative into allegory. Joseph’s “exaltation” is political, not divine rising. The baker’s hanging prefigures crucifixion? Deut 21:23 applies to criminals, not atoning saviors. Christianity universalizes Jewish particularism, claiming “fulfillment” where tradition sees continuity.

    This supersessionism marginalizes the Jewish story. Please explain Genesis 40 predicts Jesus. Why is there no explicit prophecy? Paul’s “according to the Scriptures” lacks receipts—typology fills gaps.

    Reclaiming the Narrative: Truth in the Text

    Genesis 40 is providence amid injustice: Joseph interprets, is forgotten, and eventually exalted. Themes of faithfulness (Joseph’s integrity) and divine timing resonate in Jewish life—exile-to-redemption without resurrection motif.

    For seekers, explore midrash and Talmud—the oral “lecture notes” that enliven the text. Joseph wasn’t a Christ type; he was a survivor teaching resilience.

    Call to Action: Subscribe for Milestone 11 analysis. Comment: Does Genesis 40 foreshadow resurrection? Share your view.

    Hazan Gavriel ben David

    William Bradford and the Urgent Need for Bible Study Among Young Adults: America’s Deep Biblical and Jewish Roots

    Introduction: A Timeless Call to Scripture

    In January 2026, as global uncertainties mount, a remarkable trend is unfolding: young adults are returning to the Bible in record numbers. With the increasing interest in initiatives like William Bradford Bible study for young adults, there is a growing engagement among the younger generation. According to the American Bible Society’s State of the Bible 2025 report (with trends continuing into 2026), Bible use among millennials surged 29% from 2024, while Gen Z shows significant increases in weekly reading—up to 49% in some metrics. Weekly Bible engagement hit 42% overall, the highest in over a decade, driven by Gen Z and millennials seeking purpose amid chaos.

    This resurgence echoes the vision of William Bradford, Plymouth Colony’s long-time governor and a key figure in America’s founding. Bradford’s commitment to the Bible—especially its Hebrew roots—laid the groundwork for a nation built on biblical principles. As historian David Barton of WallBuilders emphasizes, America’s “godly foundation” draws heavily from Scripture, including the Hebrew Bible, which influenced the Puritans and early colonists. This is why William Bradford Bible study for young adults was so impactful, enabling them to find both spiritual and historical guidance.

    Who Was William Bradford? Pioneer of Biblical Governance

    William Bradford (1590–1657) arrived on the Mayflower in 1620 as a Separatist Pilgrim fleeing persecution. Serving as governor for over 30 years, he authored Of Plymouth Plantation, a foundational American text chronicling the colony’s struggles and faith-driven triumphs. William Bradford Bible study young adults also draws inspiration from his writings, offering frameworks for modern spiritual engagement.

    Bradford viewed the Bible as the ultimate guide for society. In his later years, he studied Hebrew to access the Old Testament’s original language, believing translations could obscure divine truth. He wrote in his Bible: “Though I am grown aged, yet I have had a longing desire to see with my own eyes something of that most ancient language and holy tongue.” This pursuit reflected a broader Puritan ideal: modeling their “new Israel” after the biblical Hebrews, with covenants, laws, and community life drawn from the Torah.

    The Pilgrims saw their journey as a modern Exodus, and early colonial codes—like Plymouth’s laws—mirrored Mosaic principles from Deuteronomy and Exodus.

    America’s Foundations: Rooted in the Hebrew Bible and Jewish Principles

    America’s founding was profoundly shaped by the Hebrew Bible, a fact often overlooked but well-documented in historical sources. The Puritans, including Bradford’s generation, identified deeply with ancient Israel, viewing themselves as a “chosen people” building a covenant society. Thus, for many, William Bradford Bible study young adults offers a transformative exploration into these foundational ties.

    Key examples include:

    • Early legal codes in New Haven (1655) and Massachusetts drew half their statutes from the Hebrew Bible.
    • Concepts like religious tolerance, communal justice, and limited government echoed Torah teachings (e.g., Exodus 23 on due process, Deuteronomy 25 on fair punishment).
    • The “city on a hill” metaphor (from John Winthrop) stems from Matthew but reflects Isaiah’s vision of Israel as a light to nations.

    David Barton, founder of WallBuilders—a nonprofit preserving America’s biblical heritage—highlights these connections in works like Original Intent and resources on the Bible’s influence. WallBuilders asserts that the Founders quoted Deuteronomy more than any other book in revolutionary-era writings (1760–1805). Barton notes how Hebrew Scriptures provided models for republicanism, property rights, and moral governance—principles that made America unique.

    This “Judeo-Christian” foundation—rooted in the Hebrew Bible—set the stage for inalienable rights from God (Genesis 1:27), not government, and religious freedom as a natural right.

    Why Young Adults Need Bible Study Now: A Return to Roots

    In 2026, young adults face anxiety, division, and a search for meaning. Bible engagement offers resilience: Barna and American Bible Society data show Gen Z and millennials driving the surge, with men closing the gender gap and weekly reading climbing dramatically.

    Studying the Bible—especially its Hebrew roots—provides timeless wisdom:

    • Ethical living (Leviticus 19 on justice).
    • Community support (Deuteronomy 15 on care for the vulnerable).
    • Personal integrity (Proverbs).

    Bradford understood that superficial reading misses depth; original languages reveal purer truths. Today, apps, online Hebrew courses, and study groups make this accessible. With the growing interest in William Bradford Bible study young adults, these resources are more relevant than ever.

    Neglecting these roots risks cultural drift, as Barton warns. Reclaiming Bible study reconnects young adults to America’s heritage—a republic inspired by biblical Israel.

    Conclusion: Follow Bradford’s Example—Start Today

    William Bradford’s life proves Bible study builds enduring societies. In 2026, with Bible sales and engagement booming, young adults have a historic opportunity to rediscover this foundation.

    Explore WallBuilders.com for resources from David Barton, including videos on America’s biblical heritage. Read Deuteronomy, join a study group, or learn basic Hebrew online. America’s future depends on reclaiming its scriptural roots—one verse at a time.

    Internal Links Suggestions:

    • Link to related posts on Puritans, Hebrew Bible in America, or Bible study tips.
    • External: wallbuilders.com, americanbible.org/StateoftheBible.

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

    Modern Urim

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

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

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

    The End of The Darkness

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

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

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

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

    Where Is Christianity?

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

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

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

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

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

    Hazan Gavriel ben David

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

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

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

    Insights from Zechariah’s Horses and Revelation’s Horsemen

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

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

    The Tanach’s Core Message: Life and Renewal

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

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

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

    Zechariah’s Horses: Agents of Blessing and Healing

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

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

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

    Revelation’s Horsemen: Symbols of Doom and Death

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

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

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

    Rabbi Palvanov’s Insights: Christianity’s Alterations Exposed

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

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

    Building the Case: Christian Appropriation of Tanach Stories

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

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

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

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

    The Switch: How Christianity Inverted the Four Horses

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

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

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

    A Call to Reflection

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

    Hazan Gavriel ben David