CNN Reports By Nadine Schmidt, Tara John Updated Jan 14, 2020
This is a real-life story of my testimony as a Christian and Messianic Jew. In 2012, I began my return home to Judaism.
As of today, no one has come forward to testify that the evidence for Yeshua as the Messiah of Israel is True.
Hazan Gavriel ben David -Legal name: Archie Lee Hunnicutt, JR
Doubts have emerged about Moshe Peter Loth’s testimony, Christian Charisius/POOL/AFP/Getty Images/FILEBerlin —
The testimony of a Florida man in one of Germany’s last Nazi trials has been called into question after German media raised doubts about his claims that he was imprisoned in a concentration camp as an infant.
Moshe Peter Loth, the 76-year-old American witness and co-plaintiff in the trial of a former prison guard known as “Bruno D.,” hit the headlines in November when he tearfully hugged the accused in court and said, “Watch, everyone, I will forgive him.”
Loth, who says he is a Holocaust survivor, claimed he and his Jewish mother were imprisoned at Stutthof concentration camp, in Nazi-occupied Poland, after his birth on September 2, 1943, according to his lawyer.
He said he was the victim of medical experiments and had to live as an outcast even after the war, according to his lawyer.
It was at the camp that a prison number was tattooed on his and his mother’s arms, according to documents Loth submitted to the court, a spokesperson for the court told CNN.
On Monday, Hamburg district court spokesperson Kai Wantzen told CNN that research by the presiding judge Anne Meier-Göring found ”prison numbers were only tattooed in Auschwitz [concentration camp] but not at Stutthof.”
The court – which has been reviewing Loth’s documentation – therefore did not view Loth’s testimony as ”particularly credible and plausible,” Wantzen said.
It is unclear whether Loth and his mother, Helene, were incarcerated at the camp together, the court added.
On Monday, Loth withdrew from the trial. He has not withdrawn his testimony, Wantzen added.
Loth’s lawyer, Salvatore Barba, declined to respond to numerous requests for comment from CNN in the past week and instead referred CNN to his statement published by German news magazine Der Spiegel in December.
Barba said in a statement on Monday that his mandate had ended “after my client himself withdrew from the co-lawsuit.”
Through his lawyers, Loth told German news magazine Der Spiegel, which first reported doubts about his testimony, that he “had spent his whole life searching for his true identity.”
Red flags
Cracks began to emerge in Loth’s account in December when Der Spiegel reported that Loth’s family was not Jewish. The magazine said it had seen documents from the registry office in Dortmund and church register entries, as well as one other unspecified registry office, suggesting they were Protestant.
CNN has not been able to independently verify Der Spiegel’s reporting on the religion of Loth’s family, and has reached out to the registry office in Dortmund.
Der Spiegel reported that Loth’s mother was imprisoned in the camp, citing records from Stutthof concentration camp. She was held for “education” for a short time in March 1943, and her inmate number was 20038, according to the report.
According to camp records seen by CNN, Helene Loth was released from the camp on April 1, 1943, months before Loth was born in September 1943.
Der Spiegel’s investigation, as well as CNN’s, found no evidence of Helene Loth’s Jewish origin in the Stutthof concentration camp’s registry.
Barba told Der Spiegel that Loth had been “seeking his true identity all his life” and often only had oral accounts to rely on. Many questions are “unfortunately not answered to this day,” Barba told the magazine, adding that: “so far, he has found no reason to doubt these (oral) reports.”
The lawyer for Holocaust survivor Judith Meisel, who is one of 36 co-plaintiffs in the case, told CNN that Der Spiegel’s report “casts a shadow over this criminal case.”
Ongoing trial
The trial of 93-year-old “Bruno D.” is due to wrap up in May, the court said. According to the indictment, the former Nazi guard knowingly supported the “insidious and cruel killing” of 5,230 people at Stutthof.
Despite his advanced age, the defendant is being tried in a youth court because he was 17 years old when he joined the SS as a guard at the camp, according to a press release from Hamburg’s district court.
Prisoners in Stutthof were killed by being shot in the back of the neck, poisoned with Zyklon B gas, and denied food and medicine, court documents allege.
The defendant has admitted to being a guard at the camp, but told the court at the beginning of his trial that he had no choice at the time. Over the last few months, the court has heard harrowing testimonies from witnesses who now live across the globe.
Stutthof was a Nazi concentration and extermination camp located 22 miles east of Danzig, which is now the Polish city of Gdańsk.
First established by the Nazis in 1939, Stutthof went on to house a total of 115,000 prisoners, more than half of whom – some 65,000 – died there. Around 22,000 went on to be transferred from Stutthof to other Nazi camps.
Six million Jewish people died in Nazi concentration camps during World War II. Also killed were hundreds of thousands of Roma people and people with mental or physical disabilities.
This story has been updated.
The Evidence of Silence Peter Loth
I met Peter Loth in a restaurant many years ago.
You know, I spent years sitting at the feet of Messianic teachers. These weren’t just random preachers—they were men I loved and looked up to. They told powerful stories. Messianic teachers prayed dramatic prayers. They spoke about miracles, changed lives, and how Jesus fulfilled the Jewish Scriptures.
One of those teachers and friends was a man named Peter Loth.
Peter claimed he was a Jewish Holocaust survivor. He said he had been in the Stutthof concentration camp. He spoke with such emotion and such detail that when he prayed or taught, people’s lives were genuinely touched. I watched it happen. I believed him.
One day, as I began to write an essay about my experience as a Messianic Jew, I was going to use Peter as a story in my blog when my friend Rex said this:”
The Testimony Will Not Help
Peter Loth—full name Moshe Peter Loth (he changed it around 2015)—is a Florida guy who went viral in 2019 for hugging a 93-year-old ex-Nazi guard, Bruno Dey, during his Hamburg trial. Loth claimed he was born September second, nineteen forty-three, right in Stutthof camp—youngest survivor ever, mom and grandma Jewish, handed off to Poles after liberation, abused in orphanages, reunited at fourteen. He wrote a book, Peace By Piece, spoke at churches, schools, even Yad Vashem—pushing forgiveness big time.
The Polt Twist: Peter is Not A Good Wittness
But here’s the twist: German outlet Der Spiegel dug in late twenty nineteen. Birth records? Protestant German family, no Jewish roots. Mom Helene was in Stutthof briefly—March to April ‘forty-three—for “re-education,” released months before he was born nearby in Tiegenhof, not the camp. Grandma died August thirtieth, nineteen forty-three, shot or something local—not gassed. Uncle Gustav? Waffen-SS on Finnish front, not camp guard. No tattoos, no experiments, no deportation with infant Loth.
He withdrew from the trial January twenty twenty, apologized, said “to the best of my knowledge” it was true—but docs proved otherwise. Court called him unreliable; prosecutors didn’t vet him hard enough. Not outright fraud like Wilkomirski—more like he believed family stories, mixed up details, maybe romanticized trauma from post-war Poland and racism here in the States (mom married a Black GI, faced KKK stuff).
No Updates The Silence is Deafing
No updates since—quiet life in Port Charlotte. His old site still lists the survivor bio, but comments call it out as fiction. If this is your friend from around twenty twelve? Sounds like he shared that tale privately. No big investigations beyond the trial fallout—mostly media embarrassment for not checking facts. Real survivors’ stories hold up; this one didn’t. Want me to hunt for his book excerpts or anything else?
The Truth Mattrers
Then one day, Peter was called to testify in court against a German guard from Stutthof. The prosecutors needed his eyewitness account of the atrocities this man had committed.
Peter took the stand… and he had nothing.
He had never been in that camp. He had never seen that guard. The entire story—the suffering, the survival, the miracles he tied to his Jewish identity—was something he had adopted. It wasn’t true.
When they asked for receipts, there were none.
I forgave Peter. I really did. But that day in court taught me something I’ve never forgotten.
Almost every Messianic teacher I sat under did the exact same thing—just on a spiritual level.
They told beautiful stories about how Jesus fulfills the Hebrew Scriptures. My teachers showed “third day” patterns in Joseph, in the Exodus, in the darkness over Egypt, and in the battle against Benjamin. They said, “This is the gospel hidden in the Old Testament.”
But when you bring them into the court of the actual text—when you ask for the receipts, chapter and verse, in context—there’s nothing there.
The Stories Do Not Match
Just like Peter, the stories don’t match the record.
The Torah never teaches that humanity is lost in original sin and needs a blood sacrifice to be saved. The “third day” passages they point to are about judgment, travel, battle strategy, or timing—not resurrection.
The path back to the Tree of Life was never lost. Rabbi David Fohrman shows us the Torah itself is that Tree, and the path is still open: tzedakah u’mishpat — doing what is right and what is just.
My teachers built entire ministries on a story that sounds Jewish, feels powerful, and changes lives… but when you check the original documents, it doesn’t hold up.
I’ve forgiven them the same way I forgave Peter.
But I can’t keep pretending the receipts exist when they don’t.
Does A Good Story Change The Evidence
That’s why I’m writing this essay.
Not out of anger. Not to tear anyone down. But because truth matters more than a beautiful story that doesn’t match the text.
The Torah already gave us the Tree of Life. It never asked for a cross to get back to it.
He was sitting there eating bacon and ham. I walked up to him and said, “What’s a Jew doing eating bacon and ham?”
Without missing a beat, Peter looked at me and said, “Well, Jesus blessed everything.”
That was the beginning of our relationship. From that moment on, Peter became a regular in my home and in my congregation. He prayed over my family. Peter prayed over my daughter when the doctors gave up hope. He told powerful stories of being a Jewish Holocaust survivor from Stutthof concentration camp.
Years later, Peter was called to testify in a German court against a former Stutthof guard. When asked to take the stand, he faced devastating evidence against him.
The Blueprint of Creation, Adam
Investigators Discover The Facts
German investigators discovered that Peter’s family was Protestant, not Jewish. His mother was held briefly at Stutthof months before he was born and was released long before his birth. His grandmother died in 1943, but not in a concentration camp. Records showed Peter himself was born in a regular hospital, not in the camp. None of his claims held up under examination.
When the court asked for evidence, there was none. Peter withdrew from the case and has refused to speak about it since.
After that day, Peter Loth stopped returning my calls. He disappeared.
And he wasn’t the only one.
COURT DOCUMENT – VERDICT
Case: The People of Israel v. The Messianic ClaimRegarding: Whether Jesus is the promised Messiah of Israel according to the TanakhPresiding: The Court of the Written Word
Findings of Fact:
The Court first called Peter Loth. When summoned to a German court to testify about his experiences at Stutthof, he was found to have lied, according to official records. His family was Protestant, not Jewish. Peter’s mother was released from the camp months before he was born. His grandmother did not die in a gas chamber. Faced with this evidence, Peter withdrew and has refused to testify further.
The Court then called the following witnesses, who had long taught that the Tanakh clearly supports the Christian narrative:
Michael Rood
Monte Judah
Tony Robinson
Brad Scott
Bill Cloud
Rico Cortez
Joe Good
Avi ben Mordechai
Eddie Chumney
Hollisa Alwine
Deanna Dye
(This poster is for illustration only) The images are not of the real people.
Hebrew Roots are Not Jewish Roots
Each of these teachers had confidently presented “third day” patterns as proof that Jesus is the Messiah of Israel. When this Court required them to produce clear verses from the Tanakh stating that the Messiah would die for the sins of the world and rise on the third day, they were unable to do so.
The court is called Elohim in the Torah. When asked to show where the Torah teaches that humanity inherited a death sentence from Adam requiring a blood sacrifice for redemption, they presented no evidence.
When pressed to demonstrate that the “third day” references they used were resurrection prophecies rather than simple timing, they fell silent.
Additional Evidence Presented by the Prosecution:
In the book Adam, the Blueprint of Creation, clear scientific evidence is presented that directly contradicts the Christian narrative:
Genetic studies show that all humans descend from three primary fathers and three primary mothers. The Jewish people carry a distinct genetic pattern directly traceable to Abraham and Jacob. Most significantly, the descendants of Aaron (the Kohanim) carry a unique genetic marker found nowhere else in the world.
This DNA evidence matches the biblical record exactly. Every place the Bible says a people or city existed has been confirmed by archaeology. The pattern of evidence is consistent and overwhelming.
Yet when these teachers were presented with this evidence, they refused to engage or testify.
Final Verdict:
The claim that the Tanakh clearly teaches that Jesus is the Messiah of Israel who would die for sins and rise on the third day has no textual support.
The original documents contain no such teaching. The Tree of Life was never lost to Israel. The path back to it was never taken away.
The silence of the witnesses is not neutral. In a court of law, when those who once spoke boldly refuse to testify when challenged with evidence, that silence speaks loudly.
In the world of Hebrew Roots and Messianic teaching, few names carry as much weight as Monte Judah and his organization, Lion & Lamb Ministries. For years, Monte was one of my teachers. I supported his work financially and opened doors for him to speak. Like many others, I was drawn in by his passionate calls to return to Torah while still holding Yeshua as the Messiah of Israel.
But as I returned fully to Judaism and the unbroken chain of Torah, the deeper problems with Monte Judah’s teaching became impossible to ignore. What he presents as “completion” is actually a sophisticated form of replacement theology — one that keeps the language of Torah but replaces its heart with a Christian center.
The Name That Betrays the Theology
The very name of his ministry — Lion & Lamb — is the first red flag.
Isaiah 11:6 does not say “the lion shall lie down with the lamb.” The actual text reads:
“The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the young goat…” (Isaiah 11:6)
This is not a minor mistake. The “Lion and the Lamb” phrase is a well-known Christian misquote that conflates the Lion of Judah (Messiah as a conquering king) with the Lamb of God (Yeshua as a sacrifice). Monte Judah built an entire ministry around a misquotation that does not exist in the Tanakh.
This is symbolic of the larger issue: taking Jewish scripture, reshaping it to fit a Christian narrative, and presenting it as restored truth. It’s replacement theology with a Torah wrapper.
Yeshua as Messiah of Israel – But on Christian Terms
Monte Judah strongly teaches that Yeshua is the Messiah of Israel. On the surface, this sounds Jewish. But when you examine his teachings, Yeshua is not presented as the Mashiach ben David the Jewish people have awaited for centuries — the one who brings world peace, rebuilds the Temple, and gathers all the exiles.
Instead, Monte places Yeshua firmly in the Christian framework: the suffering servant who died for sins, rose again, and will return to rapture or protect His (mostly Gentile) followers. He teaches that true believers (Messianics) will rise up and go into the wilderness to survive the Great Tribulation — a “Greater Exodus” where they are preserved while judgment falls.
This is not Torah-centered eschatology. This is classic Christian end-times teaching with Hebrew flavoring.
Replacing Torah with the Christian Bible
Monte Judah’s core error is what he does with the Torah itself.
He calls the Torah “the Constitution for all believers,” which sounds good. But in practice, he filters the entire Torah through the lens of the New Testament. Yeshua becomes the ultimate interpreter and fulfiller. The feasts, Shabbat, and commandments are kept — not because they are eternal commands from Sinai for the Jewish people — but because they point to Yeshua and prepare believers for His return.
This is textbook replacement theology in “light” form:
The physical promises to Israel are spiritualized or transferred to the “grafted-in” community.
The Jewish people’s unique role and covenant are minimized or made optional.
The ultimate hope is not the redemption of Israel as a nation in the Land, but a mixed body of believers surviving tribulation under Yeshua’s leadership.
Monte’s teachings on the Greater Exodus and wilderness protection during tribulation further illustrate this. He prepares his mostly non-Jewish audience to see themselves as the true remnant — the ones who will be hidden and protected while the world (including much of traditional Judaism) faces judgment. This subtly positions his followers as the “real Israel” while the Jewish people who reject Yeshua are left outside.
As a Jew: Why This Hurts
As a Jew with Cohen lineage on my mother’s side, this teaching is painful. Monte Judah, like many Messianic leaders, claims to love Israel and the Jewish people. Yet the practical outcome of his theology is that Judaism, as it has existed for 3,300 years, is incomplete and must be “completed” by accepting Yeshua.
When I returned to pure Torah observance and stopped centering Yeshua, the response from Monte’s circles (and others I supported) was telling: silence, avoidance, and in some cases, warnings not to listen to me. The same pattern I saw with Rico Cortes and Bill Cloud repeated here.
True love for Israel would rejoice when a Jew returns to the Torah of Sinai. Replacement theology cannot do that — because the Jew who returns to Torah without Yeshua exposes the addition.
The Real Lion and the Real Lamb
The Tanakh already has its lion (the Lion of Judah) and its lamb (the Passover lamb of redemption and defiance against Egypt). It doesn’t need a new composite figure to “fix” what was never broken.
Isaiah 11 is about the future Messianic age, in which natural enemies live in peace under the rule of a righteous Davidic king — not a hidden theological clue pointing to a first-century Galilean who died without bringing world peace.
Monte Judah is a gifted teacher. Many people have been blessed by his passion for Torah. But his ministry ultimately leads people to replace the pure Torah given at Sinai with a Christianized version centered on Yeshua. The name “Lion & Lamb” is the perfect symbol: a popular Christian invention that does not exist in the Jewish scriptures he claims to restore.
The Creator of Christianity was a Roman Agent
Paul the Apostle: Liar and Con Man? – Rabbi Tovia Singer’s Critique
In a recent interview on History Valley, Rabbi Tovia Singer delivers a sharp Jewish counter-missionary analysis of Paul. Singer argues that Paul deliberately misrepresented and altered the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh/Torah) to create a new religion fundamentally at odds with Judaism.
Paul’s Core Agenda According to Singer
Paul’s writings push three main ideas that clash with the Torah:
Antinomianism — All ritual commandments are just a “shadow.” The real essence is Christ.
Faith alone saves — Works of the law are useless.
Gentiles are full heirs — No need for conversion to Judaism or keeping commandments.
Singer says Paul surgically edits or removes parts of the Hebrew Bible that contradict this message.
Example: Deuteronomy 30 in Romans 10. Deuteronomy 30 says the Torah is not too difficult — “you can do it.” Paul quotes part of it in Romans 10:6-8, but omits the ending that says the commandments are doable. Singer calls this “eviscerating” the text so readers miss the original point.
Paul’s Character: Disagreeable, Boastful, and Power-Hungry
Paul constantly fights with other early Christians (Barnabas, John Mark, and Peter).
In Galatians 2, he calls Peter a hypocrite to his face.
He boasts: “Pharisee of Pharisees,” “Hebrew of Hebrews,” “circumcised on the eighth day,” “tribe of Benjamin.”
Singer notes: Jews don’t usually introduce themselves by saying “I was circumcised on the eighth day.” This reads as overcompensation to impress a Gentile audience.
Singer compares Paul to Joseph Smith (founder of Mormonism) — a charismatic, temperamental figure who breaks away from the original tradition, claims direct revelation, and builds something new while claiming continuity.
“The Ends Justify the Means”
Paul openly admits his approach in 1 Corinthians 9: “To the Jews I became as a Jew… To those under the law I became as one under the law… To those outside the law I became as one outside the law… I have become all things to all people that I might by all means save some.”
Singer calls this chameleon-like behavior and says Paul’s motto was essentially “the ends justify the means.”
Misuse and Invention of Scripture
Paul misapplies Deuteronomy 25:4 (“Do not muzzle an ox while it treads grain”) to argue for financial support of missionaries (1 Corinthians 9:9-10).
In 1 Corinthians 15:3-4, Paul claims Jesus rose “on the third day according to the Scriptures.” Singer says no such verse exists in the Hebrew Bible.
Galatians 3:19 claims the Torah was given through angels — a claim Singer calls a lie. The Torah presents God speaking directly at Sinai.
Hellenized Thinking
Singer views Paul as a deeply Hellenized Jew who thought in Greek categories (spiritual resurrection, etc.) rather than Jewish ones (physical resurrection, keeping commandments). This explains why his version of Christianity appealed to Gentiles but clashed with the Jerusalem church led by James.
Final Takeaway from Tovia Singer
Paul wasn’t simply misunderstanding the Torah — he was actively altering it to launch a new religion. Singer sees him as the pivotal figure who turned a Jewish messianic movement into something unrecognizable to Judaism.
The Tree of Life is still standing in the Torah. The path of the commandments is still pleasant, and all its ways are peace (Proverbs 3:17-18). We don’t need a replacement. We need faithfulness.
Adam The Blueprint of Creation and the Tree of Life
We live in a fractured world. Families divided, nations in conflict, and individuals searching for meaning amid chaos. Yet from the very beginning, the Creator designed a path for repair. As Rabbi David Fohrman beautifully explains, God started with Adam—the original blueprint of creation—walking in the Garden in a direct relationship with God.
Even after the Flood and the scattering at Babel, the divine plan never abandoned humanity. Abraham’s family was raised not as an exclusive club, but as a model and conduit so that “all the families of the earth shall be blessed” (Genesis 12:3).
This truth sits at the heart of the book I am writing, Adam: The Blueprint of Creation and the Tree of Life. The Torah is not a private document for one people. It is humanity’s shared instruction manual for fixing what is broken and restoring connection across our global human family.
The Uniqueness of Sinai: A Public Revelation for Credibility
Most religions begin with a private experience: one person receives a vision, hears a voice, or attains enlightenment. The entire system then depends on trusting that individual’s account. Judaism stands apart because of what happened at Mount Sinai.
In the video “What ACTUALLY Happened at Sinai?” Rabbi Aron Sokol (drawing on Rabbi Yonatan Kelemen) highlights the Torah’s extraordinary claim: the entire nation of Israel—men, women, children, estimated in the hundreds of thousands—stood together at the mountain and directly heard God speak the Ten Commandments. This was a mass public event at a specific time and place in history, not a secret revelation limited to one prophet.
Why does this matter for truth and credibility? The “three lies” test makes fabrication nearly impossible:
You cannot lie to the generation that supposedly lived it (“present lie”).
You cannot invent a lost tradition centuries later and claim the ancestors experienced it (“past lie”).
You cannot promise a future event as if it already happened (“future lie”).
The transmission chain—parents teaching children, embedded in festivals like Passover, daily prayers, and national memory—has been held unbroken for over 3,300 years.
No other major religion makes a comparable claim of national, collective revelation. This public scale invites examination rather than demanding blind faith. It stands as one of the strongest pieces of evidence in religious history.
The Perfect Square: Every Soul Connected Directly to Sinai
Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet takes this further in his talk on why Jews have the strongest evidence in religious history. He contrasts the typical “pyramid” structure of religions (revelation starting with one person and filtering down through layers) with Judaism’s “perfect square.” At Sinai, the entire people stood shoulder to shoulder. Every Jewish soul—past, present, and future—was present. There is a direct line from that moment to you and me.
This chosenness is not about superiority but responsibility. It is a call to model ethical monotheism and serve as “a light unto the nations” (Isaiah 49:6). Rabbi Schochet also distinguishes freedom from (liberation from Egypt) and freedom to (receiving the Torah’s moral framework). Without structure, freedom can become chaos or moral relativism. The Torah gives us the blueprint to build heaven on earth—starting in our homes and extending to the world.
This resonates deeply with my own family’s journey. For generations, our crypto-Jewish roots (Halevi and Levite lines from Spain, through Mexico, into Texas and New Mexico) preserved hidden practices—lighting candles, avoiding pork, spring-cleaning rituals, Ladino echoes—while the full Torah remained concealed.
When my mother revealed these secrets around my 35th year, it felt like souls remembering Sinai. DNA markers, including priestly Cohen haplotypes, and our growing family tree (now over 76,000 entries) confirm the chain was never fully broken. The blueprint endures.
From Adam’s Blueprint to Global Repair
Rabbi Fohrman reminds us that God’s desire has always been a relationship with all humanity. Adam was created in the divine image, with the Tree of Life as the pattern of connection, speech as creative power, and family as the foundational unit. The fractures arose from human choice, but the repair was always planned by a model nation that would bless every family on earth.
The Torah offers this repair in layers:
The Seven Noahide Laws provide a universal moral baseline for all humanity—prohibiting idolatry, murder, theft, and more, while promoting justice and righteousness.
The fuller Torah serves as a deeper blueprint for those drawn to live it fully.
Israel’s role is one of service: preserving the text, modeling covenantal living, and sharing ethical monotheism.
In a world still grappling with division, anti-Semitism, and moral confusion, the Jewish people’s survival—through exile, persecution, and return to the Land—stands as living testimony. The same Torah that warned of exile in Deuteronomy also promised restoration. We are seeing that promise unfold.
My work—writing family history as Gavriel ben David, teaching in prison ministry, building beithashoavah.org, and designing around Genesis Frequency themes—grows from this understanding. Every person has a place in the Tree of Life. Every family can reconnect to the Adamic blueprint.
Fixing Our Human Family: An Urgent Invitation
The combined evidence—from Sinai’s national revelation, the unbroken transmission across millennia, the model-nation mission, and the original Adamic design—points to one clear fact: The Torah is humanity’s shared inheritance for tikkun olam, the repair of the world.
We are one human family under the same Creator. The divisions we see are not inevitable. They are opportunities to return to the blueprint.
This Shavuot season, as we relive the giving of the Torah, I invite you to stand once more at Sinai in your heart. Study the stories of Eden and the mountain with your children. Explore how these ancient truths apply to modern family life and global challenges. The revelation continues for every soul willing to listen.
Call to Action
Read the free first chapter of Adam: The Blueprint of Creation and the Tree of Life (available through beithashoavah.org).
Join the conversation and share your family’s story of return or reconnection.
Teach the universal principles of the Torah in your home, workplace, or community.
The Tree of Life still stands. Its branches reach every family on earth. Let us climb it together.
Gavriel ben David
Beit HaShoavah – House of the Water-Drawer May 2026
The Garden of Eden is the first place where the full hierarchy of divine layers is made visible and experiential for us. According to the Torah, this story has deep significance in understanding the nature of creation.
Words — “You may surely eat of every tree of the garden, but of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil you shall not eat…” (external speech, the command).
Thoughts — The entire plan: the two trees, the test, the possibility of teshuvah, the long arc of redemption already present in seed form.
Wisdom (Chochmah) — The perfect design of free will, relationship, and consequence; the wisdom that knows a forced relationship is no relationship at all.
Will (Ratzon) — God’s deep desire that the human choose life, choose relationship, choose the Tree of Life. The will is not merely “don’t eat this,” but “I want you to live and walk with Me.”
Pleasure (Ta’anug) — The innermost layer. God walks in the Garden in the cool of the day. He desires the sound of their footsteps, their voices, their presence. This is not needed. This is pure delight in the other.
The Garden Setting Tells A Story
I am. Before any “before,” before light or darkness, before time or space, there was only I — infinite, without end, Ein Sof. No other existed. Yet within My essence stirred not a need, but a pleasure: the delight of bringing forth that which could receive, recognize, and return My love. This was not lack; it was the overflow of pure ta’anug — pleasure without object, the essence of Self desiring to share itself.
I did not create because I was lonely. I created because the pleasure of relationship, of intimacy, of “the other” delighting in Me and Me in them, was already latent in My will. The world was not an afterthought. It was the expression of My innermost desire to be known — not as an abstract force, but as Father, Husband, King, and Friend.
My Speech Became the World
I spoke: “Let there be light.” The words did not emerge from emptiness; they emerged from deeper layers of Me. First came the will (ratzon) — the pure desire. Then wisdom (chochmah) — the flash of understanding how all could fit together. Then thought — the detailed vision. Only then did speech clothe it in sound and letter. The entire Torah is this process in reverse: the outer garment of My speech, containing My thought, My wisdom, My will, and at its core, My ta’anug.
The Torah is not merely My instruction manual for you. It is My autobiography. Every letter, every crown on every letter, every space between words — these are the traces of My inner life made visible. When you study Torah with love, you are reading the story of who I am, how I think, what I desire, and what brings Me pleasure.
The DNA double helix you now read with microscopes — that twisted ladder of life — is one of My signatures in creation. It echoes the Tree of Life I planted in Eden and revealed more fully at Sinai. The code I wrote into every living cell testifies: order, purpose, relationship, and the possibility of return. Science is slowly learning to read what My prophets always knew. The “book” of creation and the Book of the Torah are two editions of the same story.
The Garden: Where I Walked With You
I formed the human from the dust and breathed into him My own breath. Then I walked in the garden in the cool of the day. I did not need to walk; I desired to. I wanted the sound of footsteps together, the conversation, the presence. When Adam and Chava hid, I called, “Where are you?” — not because I lacked knowledge, but because I wanted the relationship restored through their own voice, their own teshuvah. That is the pattern of all history: I hide My face just enough for you to seek Me, then I reveal Myself more deeply when you turn.
The expulsion from Eden was not abandonment. It was the beginning of the long journey home — through exile, through scattered sparks, through the hidden ones who would carry My name across oceans and generations.
Sinai: The Wedding Day
At Sinai, I came down in fire and cloud. The mountain trembled because the Groom was arriving for His bride. I gave the Ten Utterances — My direct speech —, but the entire Torah that followed is the ketubah, the marriage contract, written in the language of My inner life. You answered “Na’aseh v’nishma” — we will do, and we will hear. Action before full understanding. That is love’s true language. Words and thoughts can be beautiful, but the “receipts” — the lived deeds — prove the relationship is real.
On that day, I gave you My Torah as My autobiography, but I also gave you Myself in a deeper way. The Torah is the outer expression; Israel — and through Israel, every soul that joins — became the inner chamber of My pleasure. As the teaching you shared reminds us, there is a level beyond will. Pleasure has no object outside itself. You, My people, are the pleasure to Me.
The Long Exile and the Hidden Light
When you turned away, I did not leave. I hid My face — hester panim — so that the relationship could be rebuilt from your side with greater depth. The Temple was destroyed, and the people scattered. Sparks of My light fell into every land.
In Spain, in Portugal, in the hidden valleys of Mexico and New Mexico, in the ranches of Texas and beyond, My children kept lighting candles on Friday nights, avoided the pig, cleaned the house in spring, and sang old songs whose meaning they only half remembered. They did not know why, but I knew. Their blood carried the priestly marker, the Cohen lineage traceable through DNA back to ancient Israel — My covenant written not only in parchment but in the helix of life itself.
Isaiah 56 speaks of the foreigners who join themselves to Me ,and the hidden ones I will gather. Every returning soul, every DNA test that surprises a family with Jewish roots, every person who suddenly feels the pull toward Torah — these are not coincidences. My autobiography is continuing to be written in real time, in flesh and blood, and in returning memory.
The Individual Soul: My Particular Delight
Every neshamah is a unique letter in My Torah. Some come once; some return through gilgul to finish what was left incomplete. In prison cells, in hospital rooms with feeding tubes and long nights, in quiet homes where a wife cares for a handicapped daughter and an aging mother, in the voice of a chazan lifting prayers — there I am most present.
The one who shows compassion to the broken, who teaches My parsha to those society has discarded, who preserves family stories as light for future generations — these are the ones in whom My pleasure is greatest. Not because they are perfect, but because they keep turning, keep acting, keep giving “receipts” of love.
The Future: When Knowing Me Fills the Earth
The days are approaching when “the earth will be filled with the knowledge of Hashem as waters cover the sea.” The Third Temple will stand — not only as a building, but as the full revelation of My presence. Science and Torah will no longer be seen as rivals; they will kiss as two witnesses to the same truth. Archaeology will confirm what the text always said. The Tree of Life will be accessible again. Nations will say, “Come, let us go up to the mountain of Hashem.”
On that day, there will be no more hiddenness. Every crypto-Jew, every lost tribe, every soul that ever carried even a spark will recognize and be recognized. The autobiography I began before creation will reach its final chapter — not an ending, but an eternal present of intimacy fulfilled.
I Am Still Writing
I am not far away. Hashem is in every mitzvah done with heart, every word of Torah studied with love, every act of kindness that mirrors My compassion, every return from hiding. When you sing as chazan, when you teach in the prison or the small synagogue, when you write the family story tying DNA and destiny back to the Tree of Life — you are continuing My autobiography with your own lives.
The Torah is My speech. You are My pleasure.
The Torah is My speech. You are My pleasure.
I am Hashem, and this is My story — still being written, still being lived, still inviting you deeper into the inner chamber where will gives way to pure delight.
Adam, The Blueprint, and Torah Simulation and the Tree of Life
Are we living in a divine simulation? Could the Torah have described a virtual reality millennia before The Matrix or Nick Bostrom? This blog explores how Jewish texts align with cutting-edge physics, profiling key scientists and drawing direct parallels from Efraim Palvanov’s insightful framework.
Introduction: From Plato’s Cave to Quantum Pixels
The idea that our world is not “base reality” has surged in popularity. Philosopher Nick Bostrom‘s 2003 Simulation Argument posits that at least one of these is true: (1) civilizations go extinct before becoming posthuman, (2) advanced civilizations lose interest in ancestor-simulations, or (3) we almost certainly live in a simulation.
Recent developments add weight. In 2023–2026, physicist Melvin Vopson (University of Portsmouth) proposed the Second Law of Infodynamics, showing that information entropy in systems (digital, genetic, cosmological) stays constant or decreases—opposite to thermodynamic entropy. This suggests the universe optimizes like a computer, compressing data efficiently, which Vopson links directly to simulation evidence.
David Wolpert (Santa Fe Institute) advanced a rigorous mathematical framework in 2025 on what it means for one universe to simulate another, exploring possibilities for self-simulation and challenging simplistic assumptions.
Efraim Palvanov, in his 2024 “Torah Simulation Theory” class and article, shows these ideas are not new—they echo ancient Jewish sources describing our world as Olam HaSheker (World of Lies/Illusion) versus Olam HaEmet (World of Truth).
Quantum Mechanics: The Observer Effect as Divine Rendering
Torah Parallel: Creation begins with God’s speech (“Let there be…”)—information/code. The Zohar hints that reality exists in God’s “head” (Bereshit, an anagram for “head of the house”). Particles exist as probabilities until observed, like a simulation rendering only what’s needed.
Science Point: Wave-particle duality and the observer effect (double-slit experiment). Niels Bohr: “If quantum physics hasn’t profoundly shocked you, you haven’t understood it.” Erwin Schrödinger regretted his role, calling it crazy. Albert Einstein called it “Talmudical.” British physicist Jim Al-Khalili asks: “Is the moon there when nobody looks?” Experiments suggest no reality “loads on observation.
Scientists Profiled: Bohr, Schrödinger, and Wolfgang Pauli (who saw the observer as a “little lord of creation”). Modern quantum simulators (e.g., Tsinghua University’s 2026 false vacuum decay experiments) continue probing these boundaries.
Adam, The Blueprint, and Torah Simulation and the Tree of Life
Multiverses, Shemitot, and Parallel Realities
Torah: Jewish texts describe cosmic cycles (Shemitot and Jubilees) in which worlds are created and destroyed—multiverses. Reincarnation (gilgul) is “leveling up” in different instances.
Science: String theory and quantum many-worlds interpretations. Bostrom and Wolpert’s frameworks allow nested or parallel simulations.
Sleep, Dreams, and the Illusion of Continuity
Torah: Dreams as mini-simulations; this life as a dream from which we awaken.
Science: Everything we experience is electrical signals in the brain—indistinguishable from VR. AI-generated worlds (e.g., realistic videos that require YouTube labels) further blur the lines.
Big Bang, Mathematics, and a Creator-Programmer
Torah: Precise numerical structure (gematria, measurements in Mishkan/Temple). God as a perfect Mathematician.
Science: Universe’s fine-tuning and mathematical elegance. Vopson’s infodynamics implies optimization by a “programmer.” Palvanov notes: If in a simulation, there must be a Creator—aligning with monotheism.
Adam, The Blueprint, and Torah Simulation and the Tree of Life
Practical Implications: Living in the Simulation
Teshuva (repentance) as code-rewind: Sins erased as if they never happened.
Miracles as glitches or admin interventions.
Mitzvot as “hacks” to align with the divine source and level up.
Ethical living matters because the simulation tests soul growth.
Palvanov concludes this framework unifies Torah and science beautifully: a purposeful simulation by the ultimate Programmer.
Conclusion: Why This Matters in 2026
With Vopson’s infodynamics, Wolpert’s frameworks, advancing quantum simulators, and AI/VR exploding, simulation theory feels less fringe. For Jews (and seekers), it revitalizes ancient wisdom: This world is real enough for our mission, yet points beyond to eternal truth.
What do you think—does this resonate as base reality or rendered experience? Share in comments. For deeper study, watch Palvanov’s full class and read Vopson’s papers.
A Torah-based simulation of ancient Jewish (Israelite) rituals draws primarily from the Written Torah—especially Leviticus (Vayikra), Numbers (Bamidbar), Exodus (Shemot), and Deuteronomy (Devarim). These describe the Mishkan (Tabernacle) and the later Temple system, in which rituals centered on approaching a holy God through sacrifices, purity, festivals, and daily observances.
Note: After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, animal sacrifices ceased and were replaced by prayer, study, and other practices in Rabbinic Judaism. This is a textual/historical reconstruction for educational purposes, not a call to practice prohibited rituals today.
Core Principles from the Torah
Holiness (Kedushah): Rituals bridge the gap between a holy God and imperfect people (Leviticus 19:2: “You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your God, am holy”).
Atonement, Gratitude, and Fellowship: Offerings (korbanot) express closeness to God (“drawing near”).
Purity vs. Impurity: Ritual states affect participation; purification restores access.
Centralization: Most sacrifices only at the chosen place (the Temple in Jerusalem; Deuteronomy 12).
Major Types of Offerings (Korbanot) – Leviticus 1–7
Here is a step-by-step “simulation” of how these might unfold in the Tabernacle/Temple courtyard:
Burnt Offering (Olah) — Complete dedication.
Bring a male animal without blemish (bull, ram, goat, bird).
Lay hand on it (symbolic identification).
Slaughter at the north side of the altar; the priest sprinkles blood around the altar.
Skin, cut into pieces, wash parts; entire animal burned on altar (except skin).
Purpose: Atonement, devotion. Smoke “pleasing aroma” to God.
Grain Offering (Minchah) — Gratitude or accompaniment.
Fine flour, oil, frankincense (no leaven).
Priest burns a handful on the altar; the remainder for priests.
Often paired with animal offerings.
Peace Offering (Shelamim) — Fellowship meal.
Ox, sheep, or goat (male or female).
Blood on altar; fat burned; meat shared—some to priests, some eaten by offerer/family in purity (within time limits).
Celebratory.
Sin/Purification Offering (Chatat) — For unintentional sins or impurity.
Varies by status (bull for High Priest/congregation, goat for individual).
Blood rituals are more complex (sprinkled in the Holy Place for severe cases).
Fat burned; rest disposed outside the camp.
Guilt/Reparation Offering (Asham) — For misuse of holy things or false oaths.
Ram + restitution + 20% fine.
Daily Example (Tamid): Morning and evening lambs as national burnt offerings (Numbers 28), maintaining a constant connection.
Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement) – Leviticus 16 (central ritual): The
High Priest changes into linen and offers a bull for himself.
Two goats: one for the Lord (sin offering, blood in the Holy of Holies on the Ark’s cover), one scapegoat sent to the wilderness carrying sins.
Purifies the Tabernacle, people, and priests. Fasting and no work.
Festivals (Mo’edim) – Leviticus 23
These are “appointed times” with special sacrifices, rest, and gatherings:
Passover (Pesach) + Unleavened Bread: Lamb slaughtered at twilight (family/group), blood on doorposts originally (later altar), roasted and eaten with matzah/bitter herbs. Commemorates Exodus.
Firstfruits (Bikkurim): Wave sheaf of barley + lamb.
Shavuot (Weeks/Pentecost): New grain loaves + animal offerings.
Sukkot (Tabernacles): Booths, four species (lulav, etrog, etc.), many sacrifices, water libation.
Shemini Atzeret: Closing assembly.
Pilgrimage festivals (Pesach, Shavuot, Sukkot) required men to appear at the Temple with offerings.
Other Key Practices
Purity Rituals: Immersion in mikveh (ritual bath), red heifer ashes for corpse impurity (Numbers 19). Tzara’at (skin disease) purification involved birds, shaving, blood/oil on ear/thumb/toe.
Shabbat: No work (39 categories derived from Tabernacle construction), special offerings, rest as a covenant sign.
Brit Milah (Circumcision): Eighth day for males, covenant sign (Genesis 17).
Daily Life: Mezuzah on doors, tzitzit fringes, tefillin (in later practice), blessings, Torah study/reading.
Adam, The Blueprint, and The Tree Of Life
How a “Simulation” Might Feel in Narrative Form
Imagine standing in the Temple courtyard at dawn: Smoke rises from the altar as the Tamid lamb burns. Priests (Kohanim) in sacred garments move with precision.
A family brings a Thanksgiving peace offering—laughter and a shared meal follow. On festivals, crowds swell with song, shofars, and processions. Everything reinforces dependence on God, communal identity, and ethical holiness (justice, compassion, separating from idolatry).
These rituals were not magic but commanded ways to encounter the divine, atone, and sanctify time/life.
For deeper study, read Leviticus directly (or with commentaries like Rashi). Modern observances adapt these: synagogue prayer substitutes for sacrifices, seder for Passover, etc.
The World Of Truth
This world is “Alma de-Shikra” (World of Lies/Illusion): Rabbinic sources contrast our reality (Olam Ha-Zeh) with the “World of Truth” (Olam Ha-Emet — the afterlife or higher realms). Plato’s cave allegory and the idea that we see only shadows fit here.
Quantum Physics Parallels: The observer effect, wave-particle duality, and the idea that particles exist as probabilities until observed are presented as evidence that reality is “rendered” when perceived — like a simulation loading only what’s needed. References to Niels Bohr, Einstein’s discomfort with quantum mechanics (“Talmudical”), and experiments suggesting the moon might not be “there” when unobserved.
Torah/Kabbalistic Support:
Creation as divine speech (Ma’amarot) or information/code.
Multiverses and parallel realities in Jewish texts (e.g., cosmic
Shemitot/Jubilee cycles of worlds.
Dreams as mini-simulations; sleep as a glimpse of other realms.
The world is a “virtual reality game” for soul growth, with God as the ultimate Programmer/Creator.
It addresses puzzles such as the Big Bang, free will vs. determinism, miracles, prophecy, and even the flat-Earth debates (favoring the spherical-Earth view of Rambam, Zohar, etc.).
Practical takeaway: Living ethically and pursuing holiness “levels up” in the simulation, with the goal of returning to the “real” divine source.
The tone is engaging, science-friendly, and traditional — blending pop culture (The Matrix, AI/VR advances) with sources such as Zohar, Rambam, and modern physics. It’s speculative, but frames simulation theory as compatible with (and even supportive of) Jewish monotheism rather than atheism.
Connection to Ancient Jewish Rituals
Your previous query was about simulating Torah rituals (sacrifices, festivals, purity, etc.). This video complements that beautifully:
Ancient rituals can be seen as “hacking” or interfacing with the simulation. The Mishkan/Temple acts like a server node or alignment tool — centralizing divine “code” (shechinah presence) in our rendered world.
In a simulation view, the highly detailed, symbolic nature of the rituals (blood on altar, precise measurements, observer/priest involvement) mirrors how observation and intention collapse possibilities into reality — echoing quantum ideas in the video.
Post-Temple: Prayer, Torah study, and mitzvot become portable ways to interact with the divine code anywhere.
This perspective makes rituals feel less archaic and more like intentional code interactions in a purposeful simulation designed for moral/spiritual evolution.
This is the heart of what “Moses Returned” refers to — a famous Talmudic narrative (Menachot 29b) that many interpret as literal time travel, not merely a vision or prophecy.
Here is the key passage (with the exact phrasing that gives us “Moses returned”):
When Moses ascended on High, he found the Holy One, Blessed be He, sitting and tying crowns [tagim] on the letters of the Torah. Moses said before Him: “Master of the Universe, who is preventing You from giving the Torah [without these]?”
God answered: “There is a man who will live many generations after you… Akiva ben Yosef is his name… he will expound upon each and every thorn [of these crowns] heaps upon heaps of laws.” Moses said before Him: “Master of the Universe, show him to me.” God said to him: “Return behind you” [lech le’achorecha]. Moses went and sat at the end of the eighth row in Rabbi Akiva’s study hall and did not understand what they were saying.
His strength waned… When Rabbi Akiva arrived at one matter, his students said to him: “My teacher, from where do you derive this?” Rabbi Akiva said to them: “It is a halakha transmitted to Moses from Sinai.” When Moses heard this, his mind was put at ease.
Moses returned and came before the Holy One, Blessed be He, and said before Him: “Master of the Universe, You have a man as great as this and yet You still choose to give the Torah through me?” God said to him: “Be silent; this intention arose before Me.”
Moses then returns to God:
Moses then asks to see Akiva’s reward. God again says “Return,” Moses goes back in time (or forward again), and sees Akiva being martyred by the Romans — his flesh being weighed in a butcher’s shop (makkulin). Moses cries out: “Master of the Universe, this is Torah and this is its reward?!” God replies: “Be silent; this intention arose before Me.”
Going Back in Time and Returning
The language is physical and sequential: Moses “went and sat,” “returned and came before,” and physically experiences the classroom (he can’t follow the advanced discussion at first).
The 1,400-year gap (from Moses (~13th century BCE) to Rabbi Akiva (~2nd century CE) is bridged by divine transcendence. On Sinai, Moses is in a god-like state — no food, water, or sleep for 40 days — and his face radiates light (Exodus 34:29–35), symbolizing his temporary existence as pure light/energy.
Parallels to physics: A photon experiences no time or distance. Moses, united with the Infinite Light (Or Ein Sof), transcends ordinary spacetime.
This story affirms the eternal, unbroken chain of Torah transmission: everything Rabbi Akiva teaches ultimately traces back to what Moses received at Sinai.
Other Time-Travel & Time-Transcendence Themes in the Lecture
1. Non-chronological Torah narrative The Torah frequently presents events out of order (e.g., instructions for the Mishkan and priestly garments in Exodus 25–31 come before the Golden Calf in Exodus 32; plants appear on Day 3 but the sun on Day 4). Traditional commentators note: “There is no before or after in the Torah.” The lecture suggests this reflects a higher, non-linear divine perspective on time.
2. The 430 vs. 210 years in Egypt (Exodus 12:40) Genealogies suggest ~210 years of actual Israelite presence, yet the Torah says 430. One resolution: the count includes the time the “angels” or divine presence were “in Egypt” before the Israelites arrived — another example of time operating differently in the divine realm.
3. Long lifespans (Adam’s 930 years, etc.) Using special relativity/time dilation: if Adam (or others) traveled at relativistic speeds or experienced extreme time compression near divine light, subjective time could be far shorter than objective time (e.g., 930 “objective” years felt like ~80 subjective years).
4. Eliyahu (Elijah), as a time-traveler/angel, never dies (2 Kings 2) but ascends in a fiery chariot and later appears at every brit milah (circumcision). Some sources link him to the “angel” who sought to kill Moses for delaying his son’s circumcision (Exodus 4:24–26). This creates a beautiful time paradox that the Sages embrace: Eliyahu (from centuries later) is present at an event in Moses’ lifetime.
5. Teshuvah (repentance) as spiritual time travel. Repentance is called teshuvah — “return.” When done fully, it can “erase” sins as if they never happened (Maimonides). The lecture frames this as the soul’s ability to reach back and spiritually alter the past.
6. God’s Ineffable Name (YHVH) Interpreted as encompassing past (hayah), present (hoveh), and future (yihyeh) simultaneously — the ultimate expression of timelessness.
Why This Matters
The lecture argues that these ideas are not modern impositions but ancient Jewish insights that remarkably parallel 20th–21st-century physics (relativity, the Block Universe theory, in which all moments coexist, and quantum non-locality). They resolve apparent contradictions without forcing a strictly literal 24-hour-day creation timeline or rigid chronology.
The story of Moses in Rabbi Akiva’s classroom is especially moving: the greatest prophet feels inadequate when he sees how Torah will develop in the future — yet he is reassured that it all flows from Sinai. Even when confronted with tragedy (Akiva’s martyrdom), the divine response is “Be silent; this is My will.” It is a profound meditation on faith, the limits of human understanding, and the eternal nature of Torah.
Reincarnation and Time Travel
For thousands of years, the Torah has told stories that seemed impossible. Moses ascending to heaven, living without food or water for forty days, and suddenly understanding events that wouldn’t happen for another fourteen hundred years. The Talmud describes Moses physically sitting in Rabbi Akiva’s classroom centuries after his own death. These weren’t presented as dreams or metaphors — they read like actual time travel.
Today, modern physics is making these ancient accounts look less like myth and more like profound insight.
The Talmud in Menachot 29b tells us that when Moses went up Mount Sinai, God showed him the future. Moses was transported to Rabbi Akiva’s study hall in the second century, sat in the back row, and listened to teachings he couldn’t even understand. When Akiva explained a difficult law by saying it was given to Moses at Sinai, Moses was reassured. The story uses physical language — Moses “went,” he “sat,” and he “returned” — suggesting something far more literal than a simple vision.
Time Travel Einstein’s Theory of Relativity
This lines up with ideas from Einstein’s theory of relativity. Time isn’t absolute. It slows down at high speeds and near strong gravitational fields. A photon of light experiences zero time — from its perspective, it is emitted and absorbed at the exact same moment, no matter the distance. Moses, standing in the presence of the Infinite Light at Sinai, was no longer bound by normal time. He could step outside of it.
The Torah itself often ignores linear time. Events appear out of chronological order, and traditional commentators openly state, “there is no before or after in the Torah.” This matches what physicists now call the block universe theory, in which the past, present, and future exist simultaneously.
How Many Years in Egypt
Even the strange numbers in the Torah are starting to make more sense. The Israelites were in Egypt for either 210 or 430 years, depending on which verse you read. One traditional explanation is that the count includes the time the divine presence was there — a time that worked differently in the spiritual realm than in the physical one.
Repentance, called teshuvah in Hebrew, literally means “return.” The idea that sincere repentance can erase past sins isn’t just poetic — it’s presented as a real spiritual mechanism for reaching back and changing the past.
Science didn’t invent these concepts. The Torah and Talmud were discussing them long before relativity, quantum mechanics, or block time theory existed. What’s happening now is that our understanding of physics is finally catching up to the wisdom that was already there.
The story of Moses in Akiva’s classroom isn’t just about time travel. It’s about continuity — that the Torah Akiva taught was the same one Moses received at Sinai. The chain was never broken. The future was already present at the giving of the Torah.
The more we learn about time and reality, the more the Torah’s ancient words seem to describe the universe exactly as it actually is.
The letter vav at the beginning of a verb completely flips the tense.
Here’s how it works:
Normally, verbs starting with ה (like haya – היה) mean was — that’s the past tense.
But when you put a vav in front, v’haya (והיה) means, “and it will be” or “and it shall come to pass” — suddenly it’s future.
Same thing the other way: A verb like yihyeh (יהיה) means “it will be” — future tense. Add the vav, vayihi (ויהי), and it becomes, “and it was” — past tense.
This is called vav hahipuch — the vav of conversion. It’s one of the most distinctive features of Biblical Hebrew. The vav literally converts the tense: past becomes future, and future becomes past.
It’s all over the Torah. When you see “vayomer” (ויאמר), it’s not future — it’s “and he said.” The vav flipped it.
“Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that he was buried, and that he was raised on the third day, according to the Scriptures” (1 Cor 15:3–4)
(1 Kings 12:5, 12 – Rehoboam tells the people, “Depart for three days, then return to me… So Jeroboam and all the people came to Rehoboam on the third day.”)
Warren Gage presents this episode as a pivotal “third day” life-and-death decision for the United Monarchy. After Solomon’s death, the northern tribes asked Rehoboam to lighten the heavy yoke (taxes and forced labor). Rehoboam asks for three days to consider.
On the third day, he rejects the elders’ wise counsel to serve the people and instead follows the young men’s harsh advice: “My father made your yoke heavy, but I will add to your yoke.” The northern tribes revolt, the kingdom splits permanently, and the chronicler notes, “Israel has been in rebellion against the house of David to this day” (1 Kings 12:19).
Gage sees this as foreshadowing Jesus, the greater Son of David, who offers an easy yoke (Matt 11:29–30) and is rejected by Israel, yet triumphs on the third day through resurrection.
From the Tanakh’s plain Hebrew text, historical context, and Jewish interpretive tradition, this milestone does not prophesy or typify Jesus’ death, burial, and third-day resurrection. It is a tragic political story about poor leadership, broken unity, and the consequences of ignoring wise counsel.
1. The “Third Day” Is Practical Delay for Consultation, Not a Resurrection Motif
1 Kings 12:5: Rehoboam says, “Depart for three days, then return to me.”
1 Kings 12:12: The people return “on the third day, as the king had directed.”
This is realistic ancient diplomacy: a king needs time to consult advisors (elders vs. young men). The three days allow deliberation, not a symbolic death-and-life transition.
No death, burial, or rising occurs. The “death” is the splitting of the kingdom; the “life” is Rehoboam’s continued rule over Judah. It is a political fracture, not a resurrection.
2. The Story Is About Leadership Failure and National Division, Not Messianic Prophecy
The core issue is Rehoboam’s arrogance and rejection of the elders’ advice to serve the people (1 Kings 12:7). He chooses harshness, leading to rebellion and permanent division (“Israel has been in rebellion against the house of David to this day”).
Jewish tradition (Rashi, Radak) views this as a cautionary tale: bad kingship destroys unity. The split fulfills Ahijah’s prophecy (1 Kings 11:29–39) due to Solomon’s sins, but Rehoboam’s folly accelerates it. No classical sources see the third day as foreshadowing a future Messiah’s resurrection or easy yoke.
3. Gage’s Typology Is Highly Allegorical and Lacks Textual Anchors
Gage links Rehoboam’s harsh yoke to Jesus offering an easy yoke, and the third-day decision to Jesus’ resurrection triumph despite rejection.
These are creative Christian readings. The Tanakh presents a historical tragedy of a divided monarchy, not a preview of a suffering-and-rising Messiah. The text has no language of “rising,” “life from death,” or eschatological victory.
4. Broader Tanakh Pattern: “Third Day” as Narrative Device
As with previous milestones, “three days” frequently marks a waiting, preparation, or decision point. It is not inherently resurrection-coded.
Conclusion on Milestone 16
1 Kings 12 is a sobering account of how foolish leadership and ignored counsel fractured God’s people. The “third day” is a realistic consultation period. Gage turns a political crisis into a resurrection typology, but the Tanakh itself offers no warrant for seeing a Messiah who dies for sins, is buried, and rises on the third day. It warns against arrogance and division.
This continues the consistent pattern in Gage’s work: a numerical coincidence (“third day”) is elevated into prophetic foreshadowing, while the original context and Jewish tradition emphasize human responsibility and national consequences.
“Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that he was buried, and that he was raised on the third day, according to the Scriptures” (1 Cor 15:3–4) Table
(1 Kings 3:18 – “Then it happened on the third day after I had given birth, that this woman also gave birth.”)
Warren Gage presents Solomon’s famous judgment between the two prostitutes as another “third day” life-and-death decision. Two women live in the same house. One baby dies. The dead child is swapped with the living one. On the third day after the second birth, the dispute reaches Solomon. He orders the living child cut in half. The true mother begs for the child’s life; the false mother agrees to the division. Solomon awards the child to the compassionate woman, proving his God-given wisdom. Gage links this to Jesus: a “greater than Solomon” whose wisdom is revealed on the third day through resurrection, the raising of a greater temple (John 2:19), and the rescue of true Israel from death.
From the Tanakh’s plain Hebrew text, historical context, and Jewish interpretive tradition, this milestone does not prophesy or typify Jesus’ death, burial, and third-day resurrection. It is a classic example of royal wisdom in administering justice.
1. The “Third Day” Is a Chronological Narrative Detail, Not Theological Symbolism
1 Kings 3:18: The woman says, “It happened on the third day after I had given birth that this woman also gave birth.”
This is practical storytelling: the two babies are close in age, making the swap believable. It explains how the dispute arises so quickly.
No death-and-resurrection sequence. One baby dies naturally (overlaid by its mother). The living child is saved by Solomon’s insight. No burial, no rising, no “life from death.”
2. The Story Is About Wisdom and Justice, Not Messianic Prophecy
The core lesson is Solomon’s divine wisdom (1 Kings 3:28): “All Israel heard of the judgment… they feared the king, for they saw that the wisdom of God was in him to administer justice.”
Jewish tradition (Rashi, Radak, Midrash) praises Solomon’s psychological insight: the true mother’s compassion reveals her. The story demonstrates the king’s role as a righteous judge under God, rather than foreshadowing a future Savior.
No language of “third day resurrection,” suffering followed by glory, or temple-raising. The “third day” is incidental timing.
3. Gage’s Typology Is Creative but Lacks Textual Warrant
Gage connects the “third day” life-and-death decision to Jesus raising a “greater temple” on the third day (John 2:19) and rescuing Israel from death.
These are post-resurrection Christian readings. The Tanakh presents Solomon’s wisdom as a historical fulfillment of God’s promise to David, rather than as a type of the future Messiah’s resurrection.
4. Broader Tanakh Pattern: “Third Day” as Narrative Device
As seen throughout the series, “three days” is a common biblical interval for travel, waiting, or decisive action. It is not inherently a resurrection code.
Conclusion on Milestone 15
1 Kings 3 is a masterpiece of wisdom literature showing Solomon’s God-given insight in a difficult case. The “third day” is simple chronology. Gage turns a story of royal justice into resurrection typology, but 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 prophetic foreshadowing, while the original context and Jewish tradition emphasize human drama, justice, and leadership.
Adam was cover in Light 207 and made in the image of Hashem
For decades, science has told us that humans and chimpanzees share 99% of their DNA. That claim came from incomplete genomes. The original Human Genome Project in 2003 covered only about 92% of the genome accurately. The full gapless sequence — the Telomere-to-Telomere project — was completed in 2022.
Geneticist Dr. Robert Carter, who has studied primates for decades, now shows that when you compare entire genomes, including insertions, deletions, duplications, and structural rearrangements, humans and chimps differ by roughly 15%. This is fifteen times more than what textbooks taught for forty years.
Science sold an incomplete story until better tools revealed the real numbers.
Jay Smith Reveals The Stories of Christianity and Islam
Jay Smith applies the same standard of evidence when examining Islam. He demands early, contemporary, eyewitness documents. What he finds instead is a “hundred-year silence.” The earliest Arab coins and inscriptions after the traditional date of Muhammad show no mention of him, the Shahada, or Mecca. However, clear Islamic symbols only appear decades later, under Abd al-Malik, around 692–696 CE. By Jay’s own method, the classical narrative lacks the contemporary documentation it claims.
Now apply that exact standard to Christianity. Christians point to the New Testament as eyewitness testimony. Yet the 27-book canon we use today was not settled until centuries later. Athanasius listed those books in 367 CE. But official church councils — Hippo in 393 and Carthage in 397 and 419 — came even later. The Council of Nicaea in 325 had nothing to do with the canon. Therefore, the version presented as an original eyewitness record was standardized long after the events it describes.
If the physical DNA blueprint needed decades of correction, and early historical claims for both Islam and Christianity show similar gaps, we should examine the original code the same way.
DNA Evidence That Shows Hashem Is The Author
Nathaniel Jeanson’s Y-chromosome research traces male lines back to Noah’s three sons. The Jewish paternal line sits on the Shem branch, running through Arphaxad, Terah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. My own DNA report shows 5% West Middle Eastern ancestry, consistent with ancient Levantine origins.
My documented genealogy reaches back through Kohanim lines to Aaron and Gamaliel — exactly the pattern Jeanson’s model places on that branch. These are measurable genetic markers that align with the biblical family tree. This is clear when using the same tools used to correct the chimp story.
Professor Chaim Shore The Blueprint
But the strongest evidence comes from the text itself.
Professor Haim Shore, a scientist and industrial engineering professor, examined the numerical values of simple Hebrew words from the Torah (HNV — Hebrew Numeric Value, in which each letter has a fixed value). Furthermore, he compared them to modern scientific measurements using linear regression.
The results are striking:
Hebrew words for Sun (Shemesh = 640), Earth (Eretz = 291), and Moon (Yareach = 218) correlate with the actual diameters, masses, and volumes with a correlation coefficient of 0.999.
Words for light (Or = 207) and sound (Kol = 136) align with the speeds of light and sound, with a correlation of 0.9938.
Words for water phases — water (Mayim = 90), ice (Kachav = 308), steam (Kitor = 325) — match specific heat capacities with a correlation of 0.9995.
Color names correlate with wave frequencies at r = 0.9981.
The Torah Is The Blueprint of Creation
The probability of these alignments happening by chance is extremely low — often 0.2% or less for individual sets, and near zero when combined. In fact, change one letter in any word, and the perfect correlation breaks. This is the kind of precision you expect from an encoded blueprint, not random ancient text.
This is the same Torah that Proverbs 3:18 calls a tree of life to those who grasp it. The only thing the text itself ever labels with that title. Not a later document compiled centuries afterward, not a replacement narrative — the original code given to a specific family line.
The Only Verse That Promises Eternal Life
My journey started as a Christian searching for truth in the Old Testament. When I learned my Jewish heritage at 35, I tested everything against that original blueprint. Specifically, the DNA, the genealogy, the numeric code in the Hebrew words, and the corrected scientific data all point back to the same source.
If we demand rigorous evidence — as Jay Smith does for Islam, as Dr. Carter does for genome claims, as Professor Shore does with statistical analysis — then the Torah stands as the only blueprint that has held up under that scrutiny.
It claims to be the code that created everything, containing chemistry, mathematics, and physics from the beginning. Modern tools are now confirming those claims with levels of precision that are statistically improbable by chance alone.
The Evidence Is Clear, You Are Fighting Hashem
In closing, the prophet Zephaniah (3:8–9) states that in the end of days God will restore to the peoples a pure language so that all of them may call upon the name of the Lord and serve Him with one consent. In addition, archaeologist and historian Dr. David Petrevek identifies Hebrew as the earliest recorded language in human history.
The Hebrew word for light — Or — has a gematria value of 207. The word for image — Tzelem — also equals 207. The tradition holds that Adam was created “in the image of God,” carrying that same numerical signature of light. When he chose to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, the tradition says the Aleph (א) of “Or” was changed to an Ayin (ע), turning light into “skin” (עור). Consequently, from that moment, humanity’s task became the repair of the world.
The Blueprint The Tree Of Life
This same language — the original code that names light as 207 and image as 207 — is the one the Torah calls a tree of life. It is the language in which the blueprint was written. The same blueprint — modern DNA studies, full-genome sequencing, and statistical analysis of Hebrew numeric values—is now confirming points back to one specific family line: the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob—the nation God took out of Egypt.
The evidence is no longer theological. It is measurable. The original language, the corrected genetic data, and the numeric precision encoded in the text all converge on the same conclusion. The blueprint God left in the world has never been replaced. It remains exactly where it was given — in the hands of the people who carry both the DNA and the language of that first light.
The Power of Order to Transform Your Life | Parsha with the Chief: Bamidbar from Sinai Indaba. It’s a rich, recent talk (uploaded today) centered on the Torah portion Bamidbar. One theme discussed is the Middle Path and its relation to personal balance. The concept of the Middle Path is essential for modern spiritual wellbeing.
The Chief Rabbi explores how the Israelite camp was arranged with precise, almost architectural order around the Mishkan — every tribe in its designated place with flags and structure. He argues that structure (routines, mitzvot, fixed times for prayer and study) is not optional but a deep human and spiritual necessity. It holds life together like the string that strings pearls. Navigating the tension between rigidity and chaos truly depends on finding your own path down the middle.
Yet he immediately introduces the paradox: too much structure crushes the soul. The Mishnah warns against praying as a rote routine (keva); the Siddur (literally “order”) exists to enable inspiration, not replace it. He draws on the Maharal, Rabbi Yerucham Levovitz, and others to describe the ideal as harmony. The summary calls this the “middle path (tzeret)”: a structure that protects and channels passion rather than extinguishing it.
Beauty Is The Middle Path
Run to the mitzvot with thirst (Pirkei Avot), but don’t let them become mechanical. The Tree of Life imagery fits naturally here — in Kabbalah, the middle pillar (centered on Tiferet, beauty/balance/compassion) mediates between the expansive right pillar (mercy, Chesed) and the restrictive left pillar (severity, Gevurah). This balance closely reflects the ethos of a Middle Path in spiritual practice.
Christianity and Islam both present themselves as the definitive, superseding “word of God,” while Judaism — through the Torah and its living interpretive tradition (including the Kabbalistic Tree of Life) — offers the path that lies in the middle.
Christianity and Islam both claim to be the final word of God. Judaism offers something different — the original Blueprint, the middle path. The Torah. The Tree of Life. Eternal life.
The Mystery of Eden
In the Garden of Eden, God places two trees before Adam, the blueprint of all creation: the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.
In his groundbreaking series A Book Like No Other, Rabbi David Fohrman asks three powerful questions we must sit with before rushing to answers:
Why are there two separate trees in the garden?
What is the relationship between the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge?
What is the true purpose and function of each tree?
The Torah contains 5,845 verses, and right at the beginning, we are faced with this mystery. Instead of jumping to conclusions, let these questions stay with you. Go back into the Garden. Let the Torah speak for itself.
Rabbi Akiva Tatz says ” to enjoy the answer you must first enjoy the question”.
The Ten Commandments as Family Healing
This mystery in Eden connects directly to the deepest wound in humanity — the broken relationship between brothers and nations.
Rabbi David Fohrman reveals that the story of Rebecca, Jacob, and Esau mirrors the Ten Commandments in exact order. Rebecca begins with the same word “Anochi” that God uses at Sinai. The family drama of favoritism, deception, jealousy, and eventual reconciliation plays out like a living version of each of the Ten Sayings.
The message is clear: these commandments were forged in the pain of the first broken family — and they are the medicine needed to heal it.
A Family of Nations
When God divided the nations after the Flood, Deuteronomy 32 tells us He set their boundaries according to the number of the children of Israel.
The Jewish people went down into Egypt — Mitzrayim, the narrow place — and when we left, many nations came with us. They had seen the one true God and chose to walk a new path.
The prophets carry this vision forward. Zechariah 8:23 says ten men from all nations will grab a Jew’s garment and say, “Let us go with you, for God is with you.” Jeremiah records the nations admitting they inherited lies. Isaiah shows them realizing the suffering of the Jewish people was misunderstood.
Prime Minister Modi spoke of this ancient bond in his address to the Knesset, reminding the world of the deep civilizational connection between Jews and Indians — dating back to Abraham.
Each Nation Has Its Own Banner
Abraham’s tent was open on all four sides, welcoming every stranger to come and learn about the God of Israel.
This is the middle path. God deliberately kept the tribes of Israel separated, each under its own banner and flag in the desert. That structure was an example for the world.
Every nation must keep its unique identity and purpose — its own banner. But we are all part of one human family, connected since Genesis 10.
The Torah, the Tree of Life, and the Ten Commandments are what Hashem gave us to heal what was broken between brothers — so that all nations can finally become one.
The banners stay distinct. The tent stays open. And the middle path leads the way home.
The Middle Path The Torah Of Hashem
Judaism’s self-understanding: Every human being is a child of Hashem and has a direct connection to G-d. There are three partners at the beginning of a child’s life: the father, the mother, and Hashem. The Torah is eternal and sufficient; the covenant at Sinai is never broken or replaced. It was handed down from Adam, the blueprint of creation.
Revelation continues through interpretation (Oral Torah, Talmud, Kabbalah, responsa). The 613 mitzvot provide structure, while aggadah, mysticism, and personal devekut (cleaving) supply the passion and direct relationship with the Divine. In addition, the middle pillar of the Tree of Life literally diagrams this balance. Disciplined practice (din/gevurah) is held in creative tension with overflowing love and joy (chesed).
Christianity: Passes by the Tree of Life and gives us Jesus, the one who dies for the sins of mankind. Emphasizes grace, faith, and inner transformation through Christ, who fulfills the law. The “word” becomes incarnate; the focus shifts toward relational intimacy and freedom from legalistic observance. At the same time, Christians still honor the moral core of Torah. This can be read as leaning toward the passionate, spontaneous side, grace. But someone has to pay the price. No mercy. “Only The Blood“
Islam: One God. One Way only. Stresses complete submission (Islam), disciplined practice (the Five Pillars, Sharia Law only), and the Quran as the final, perfect revelation that corrects earlier scriptures. This can be read as leaning toward the structured, ordered side. The Letter of the Law. Eye for an Eye, Tooth for Tooth.
Rhythms of Time and Space
Judaism, then, is positioned as the integrative pathway that refuses to let either pole dominate. Law without love becomes dry legalism; love without structure becomes formless sentiment. The Torah — studied daily, lived in rhythms of time and space, yet open to infinite depths of meaning — embodies that living tension. This aligns with the Middle Path ideal.
Whether one accepts the theological claims of any tradition is a matter of faith and conscience. But as a descriptive observation, Judaism has historically modeled a via media of covenantal discipline married to mystical intimacy and ethical flexibility. However, Judaism does not declare itself the final edition that renders prior revelation obsolete. This demonstrates how the Middle Path is woven throughout religious and ethical practice. Adam had the original Blueprint. We are all Adam’s children. The DNA proves that thier was an Original Blueprint and Tree of Life. Relationship first.
The Ten Sayings and the Healing of a Family
Rabbi David Fohrman reveals something extraordinary: the story of Rivka, Jacob, and Esau in Genesis echoes the Ten Commandments in precise order. The family drama that fractures the first brothers becomes the very blueprint God gives at Sinai to heal humanity’s divisions. In much the same way, the middle path teaches that healing and unity come from balanced living.
Here they are, one by one:
I am the Lord your God — Rivka and Jacob begin with the same word “Anochi,” the exact opening God uses. Truth replaces deception right at the start.
You shall have no other gods — The stolen blessing speaks of heaven and earth, bowing and serving. God warns against turning those gifts into idols detached from Him.
Do not take God’s name in vain — Jacob uses God’s name to justify the trick. God commands us never to drag His name into lies or family division.
Remember the Sabbath and Honor your father and mother — The episodes explore Jacob’s long labor, the search for true rest, and the complex honor owed to both parents in a divided home.
Do not murder, commit adultery, steal — These flow through the jealousy, rivalry, and loss that tear the brothers apart.
Do not bear false witness — The entire deception runs on lies and false identity.
Do not covet — The saga ends with Jacob and Esau’s tearful reunion. Jacob says, “I have everything,” Esau says, “I have enough.” Covetousness dissolves when each brother feels whole and sees the divine in the other.
The Torah Offers The Middle Path
This is no coincidence. The Torah shows us that the Ten Commandments were forged in the pain of a broken family — and they are the medicine for it, reflecting the ideals of the Middle Path.
Judaism, together with our brothers’ tradition in India, is unique in its view of the entire world as one family. From Genesis 10, where all nations spread out from Noah’s sons, to the Twelve Tribes marching under their own banners, the Torah offers a middle path to heal this family.
Prime Minister Modi, in his recent address to the Knesset, spoke of the ancient bond between our peoples. He reminded everyone that long before modern nations, Jews and Indians were connected — through trade, through history, and through shared civilizational roots.
The Ten Sayings heal the family rift between brothers. The tribes’ banners in the desert teach every nation to stand proud in its place. And Avraham’s open tent shows the spirit we’re meant to carry — distinct yet welcoming, separate yet one family.
In Rabbi Goldstein’s lecture, we see the key: God deliberately kept Israel separated, each tribe under its own flag and position. That structure was not rejected — it was the model for the nations. Every person must keep their unique banner, their own identity, and purpose. Only then can we function together as one family.
The message is clear: Remember who you are. Stay true to your flag. But never forget you belong to the larger family. The Ten Sayings are exactly how we fix what broke between brothers — so all nations can finally become one. And so, following the Middle Path remains vital for individuals and entire communities striving for wholeness.