Category Archives: Daily Thoughts

“The Hidden Blueprint: How the Names of Jacob’s Sons Reveal the Entire Torah Narrative –

Answering Biblical Criticism with Chazal and Rabbi Fohrman”


In 2015, Rabbi David Fohrman released a now-famous lecture titled “Answering Biblical Criticism.” In it, he quietly introduced a compelling literary argument. This argument references Torah single authorship. It connects to Jacob’s sons and the Exodus. This argument supports the divine authorship of the Torah. The argument is elegant. It is mathematically improbable. It is also rooted in classic Jewish sources. This combination turns centuries of academic Bible criticism on its head.

Here is the argument in one sentence:

The birth order and meanings of Jacob’s first three sons demonstrate a prophetic sequence. Reuben means “see, a son.” Shimon means “He has heard.” Levi means “he will join.” These names perfectly and sequentially predict the three-stage redemption narrative of the Book of Exodus. This is explicitly declared by God Himself in Exodus chapters 3–6.

Torah single authorship Jacob’s sons Exodus

This is not mystical wordplay. It is a verifiable, text-based phenomenon. Chazal noticed it two thousand years ago. Modern scholarship has never been able to explain it away.

The Sons Of Jacob

The Hidden Blueprint: How Jacob’s Sons Prove the Torah Could Only Have One Author

The Names and Their Prophetic Echoes

When Leah names her first three sons in Genesis 29, she is not merely expressing personal emotion. Midrash after Midrash tells us she is speaking with ruach ha-kodesh – divine inspiration.

Torah single authorship Jacob’s sons Exodus

  1. Reuben – “See, a son!” (Gen 29:32) “Because the Lord has seen (ra’ah) my affliction…” → Exodus 3:7. “I have surely seen (ra’oh ra’iti) the affliction of My people…”. In Exodus 4:22, it states: “Thus says the Lord: Israel is My son, My firstborn (bni bechori).” Baal HaTurim points out that ראובן = בכורי in gematria. The connection is exact.
  2. Shimon – “He has heard” (Gen 29:33) “Because the Lord has heard (shama) that I am hated…” → Exodus 2:24 – “God heard (va-yishma) their groaning…” → Exodus 3:7 – “I have heard (shamoa shama’ti) their cry…”
  3. Levi – “Now my husband will be joined to me” (Gen 29:34). The root ל-ו-ה appears only here in all of Genesis. It is used in the context of marital attachment. → At Sinai, Israel becomes “joined” to God in covenant: “They shall be Mine… a kingdom of priests” (Ex 19:5–6). → The tribe of Levi is literally “joined” (nilveh) to God forever (Numbers 18:2–4).

The sequence is not random. The Torah itself later records God testifying against Pharaoh using the exact same order:

“ראה ראיתי… שמוע שמעתי… בני בכורי ישראל” “I have surely seen. I have surely heard. Israel is My firstborn son.” (Exodus 3–4).

The Chiastic Masterpiece of Exodus

Rabbi Fohrman takes the discovery far deeper. The entire Book of Exodus is structured as a perfect chiasm whose central axis is the tribe of Levi and whose “bookends” are the tribe of Reuben:

  • A – Reuben motif: Pharaoh “sees” the multiplying Israelites and fears them (Ex 1:9 – “ראו”, same root as Reuben)
  • B – Shimon motif: Israel cries out, God “hears” (Ex 2:24, 3:7)
  • C – Levi motif: Covenant at Sinai – Israel is “joined” to God
  • B’ – Shimon reversed: Golden Calf – “They have turned aside quickly… they did not listen”
  • A’ – Reuben reversed: Plague of darkness – “A man could not see his brother” (Ex 10:23)

The literary architecture is breathtaking. The same three tribes begin Israel’s national story in Genesis. They form the symmetrical skeleton of the entire redemption narrative in Exodus.

Chazal Saw It First

The Sages never needed modern literary theory to notice this. Consider these sources:

  • Shemot Rabbah 1:27: “When Reuben was born, God spoke. He said, ‘In the future I will say My son, My firstborn.’ Therefore, she called his name Reuben.”
  • Tanchuma Yashan, Shemot 4: God testifies using the precise order of the three sons.
  • Zohar Chadash (Bereishit 28b): The three sons correspond to the three stages of redemption. The first stage is seeing the pain. The second stage is hearing the cry. The final stage is the joining at Sinai.

Two thousand years ago, our Sages already understood that the Torah was speaking across centuries with a single, prophetic voice.

How Jacob’s Sons Prove the Torah Only Have One Author

Reuben : Behold, a son – Sees affliction but unstable (like Israel’s early wanderings and loss of birthright).

– Simeon : God hears – Heard in suffering, but violent (echoes pogroms and exiles).

– Levi : Joined – Attachment to God amid trials (Levites as priests, but scattered).

– Judah : Praise – Royal line, kingship through David to Messiah (and modern Israel’s resilience).

– Dan : Judge – Justice in the end times (tribal reversals).

– Naphtali : My struggle – Wrestling for freedom (like the Haganah fights).

– Gad : Troop comes – Invasion and victory (biblical wars to 1948 defenses).

– Asher : Happy – Blessing in prosperity (post-exile rebuilds).

– Issachar : Hire/reward – Labor for the land (aliyah waves).

– Zebulun : Dwelling/honor – Maritime trade and global diaspora success. –

Joseph : He adds/increase – Fruitfulness in Egypt/exile (spies, statesmen like Disraeli). –

Benjamin : Son of the right hand – Strength in youth (modern Israel’s tech/military edge).

The Fatal Problem for the Documentary Hypothesis

The academic Documentary Hypothesis claims that Genesis and Exodus were stitched together centuries apart by different authors or schools:

  • “J” likes anthropomorphic “seeing” language
  • “E” prefers “hearing” language
  • “P” focuses on priestly covenant and “joining”

The irony is devastating. The critics use stylistic differences to divide the text into sources. Ironically, these same differences unify the text across centuries in prophetic order.

Ask any honest scholar: What is the statistical probability of three separate documents coordinating their favorite verbs? These documents were written hundreds of years apart by competing schools. They could accidentally match the birth order of twelve brothers named four centuries earlier?

The answer is effectively zero.

From Defense to Offense

For too long, believing Jews have been on the defensive against higher criticism. This discovery flips the script. We now possess an argument that is:

  • Text-based and verifiable by anyone
  • Rooted in classic Jewish sources
  • Statistically and literarily overwhelming
  • Impossible to explain under any naturalistic, multi-author theory

No ancient Near Eastern text – Egyptian, Akkadian, Ugaritic, or Greek – shows anything like this level of long-range design. Its symmetrical, prophetic nature is unparalleled. The Torah stands alone.

Conclusion: One Author Who Knows the End from the Beginning

The Ramban opens his commentary on Exodus by calling it Sefer HaGeulah. This means the Book of Redemption. Every detail of it is woven together with chochmat ha-Elohim, divine wisdom.

We see Reuben’s name echoing in “Israel is My firstborn.” We hear Shimon’s name in the cries God answers. We watch the tribe of Levi become the eternal symbol of Israel’s attachment to God. We are not looking at the work of human editors.

We are looking at the fingerprint of the One who declared, long before the story unfolded:

“See, a son! I have heard! And now – he will be joined to Me.”

That is the voice of a single Author – the Author of history itself.

Sources & Further Study

  • Rabbi David Fohrman, “Answering Biblical Criticism” (YouTube)
  • Bereishit Rabbah 84, Shemot Rabbah 1, Tanchuma Yashan Shemot
  • Baal HaTurim, Sforno, and Ramban on Genesis 29
  • Zohar Chadash, Bereishit 28b

Chazzan Gavriel ben David

What the World Missed: The Star of Yaakov and the Quiet Dawn of Redemption

USA and Israel and the covenant.

A Letter from Gavriel ben David.

It was dedicated on December 7th, 2025.

This date marks the 84th anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attack. The attack ended one world war. It unknowingly set the stage for World War III. This was referred to as the Star of Yaakov and the Quiet Dawn of Redemption.

On this day, we remember the end of World War II and the beginning of World War III. The beginning has already happened. But if we are diligent and ignore the noise, we will see the signal.

We will see that God is moving in the world. Through President Donald Trump, the modern-day Cyrus, He is bringing the nations toward the valley of decision. Ultimately, this will lead toward peace.

Today, I invite every reader. If the Bible is true, then we are all defenders of the covenant God first made with Adam. It was later renewed with Abraham. We must remember we are family. Islam, Christianity, and Judaism are the three children of Abraham. They have spent centuries fighting. According to the Torah itself, they are destined to become one in the last days. Unity does not demand agreement; it requires a greater purpose: to leave this world better than we found it. That purpose is the beating heart of all three faiths.

On September 27, 2023 (Elul 12, 5783), a rare triple conjunction of Saturn, Mercury, and Venus occurred. Just days before Rosh Hashanah 5784, they formed a blazing star in the western sky. NASA called it a “planetary alignment.” The Zohar (3:212b) described it differently. The prophecy of Bilam in Numbers 24:17 also mentioned this event. It said, “A star shall shoot forth from Yaakov, and a scepter shall rise from Israel.”

The world scrolled past the picture. The Jewish people looked up and remembered.

That star was the opening trumpet. What followed was no coincidence.

The Star Of Yaacov.
  • October 7, 2023: the Simchat Torah massacre was the spark. Rabbi Matityahu Glazerson’s Torah codes had already marked it as the beginning of the War of Gog u’Magog.
  • The nations began gathering, exactly as Yoel (Joel) chapter 3 described, into the Valley of Jehoshaphat the valley of decision.
  • Qatar, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia are already contracted to rebuild Gaza. This sets the perfect trap. The moment Israel defends its own soil, the entire world is drawn in.
  • Satellite images analyzed by Israeli intelligence experts show deliberate protection of Hamas leadership. This includes the tunnel infrastructure throughout the war. The officer interviewed by Yishai Fleisher confirms this.
  • Iran, the “king of the north” in Yechezkel 38, orchestrated the October 7 attack. They used a strategy lifted almost verbatim from an American general’s counterinsurgency playbook.

All of this feels planned because, from the human side, it is.

Albert Pike’s 1871 letter and Rabbi Alon Anava’s missing lecture are part of this. The quiet dismantling of Israeli sovereignty since 2005 also fits the pattern. Every piece reflects the pattern the nations have always followed when they conspire against the God of Israel (Psalm 2).

Yet the Torah told us the end from the beginning.

Yirmeyahu (Jeremiah) 16:14–15 promises: “Therefore, behold, days are coming, says the Lord. This saying will not be repeated. ‘As the Lord lives’ was a common saying. It stated, ‘He brought up the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt.’ In the future, people will declare, ‘As the Lord lives. He brought up the children of Israel from the land of the north.’ ‘And from all the lands where He had banished them’ will also be declared.”

The coming exodus will be so great that the exodus from Egypt will become a footnote.

Yechezkel (Ezekiel) 37 shows us how: two sticks, Yehudah and Ephraim, become one in the hand of God. Ephraim, the lost ten tribes, is scattered among the nations. Yet, it still carries the blessing of fruitfulness and multitude. It has always held the banner of the United States of America. This nation is founded on the language. It was financed in its darkest hour by a Polish-Jewish Chazzan named Haym Salomon. It was protected by Jewish blood from Lexington to Normandy. Still today, it is the only superpower that offers help without demanding that Jews convert to Christianity. Jews do not need to change their faith to receive assistance.

That is the mark of Ephraim: they stand with Israel without trying to replace Israel.


In the middle of this storm stands a disruptor. He is a pagan king who does not know the God of Israel by name. Yet, he is being used exactly like Koresh (Cyrus) to clear the path home.

Rabbi Mendel Kessin has taught for almost a decade. He believes that Donald Trump is the rehabilitated soul of Esau. Trump wields raw power to break the chains that the evil forces have placed around the world.

The dry bones are rattling. The sticks are moving toward each other. The star has already risen.

We are not waiting for a superhero. We are waiting for a movement. A movement that begins when the children of Abraham remember they are brothers, when the swords are finally beaten into plowshares, when the witnesses Israel and her unexpected allies stand in the courtroom of history and declare with one voice:

“The God of Abraham is real. He told us the end from the beginning. And He is faithful to perform it.” May we live to see the day when Passover is no longer the greatest story we tell our children. This is because an even greater redemption will have overtaken it.

Ken yehi ratzon.

Chazzan Gavriel ben David December 7, 2025

“You Shall Not Murder” – The Hair That Binds Isaac, Esau, and Samson

You Shall Not Murder”

The Hair That Binds Isaac, Esau, and Samson: What Strength Really Means in the Torah

When my daughter asked me, “Dad, what did Great-Great-Great-Grandpa Isaac actually do?” I opened the Torah and… almost nothing. No wars. No speeches. No miracles. Just wells. He digs, and digs, and digs. Then the Philistines fill them in. He digs again. No anger. No revenge. Just quiet, relentless strength.

Rabbi David Fohrman (Aleph Beta, “Samson: The Man Who Was Too Strong”) asks the question that changed everything for me:

Why does the Torah leave Isaac’s biography so empty… unless Samson is the missing chapter?

Samson is the only other man in Tanakh with his entire identity built on raw, superhuman strength. The Torah is emphasizing: Look at them together — and you will finally understand what real strength is.

The Chiastic Mirror – 40-Year Cycle, Hair, and Water

LevelIsaac (Genesis 26)Hair / Strength MotifSamson (Judges 13–16)Hair / Strength Motif
A – 40-Year SubjugationPhilistines stop up Isaac’s wells for generations (26:15,18) – water = life deniedStrength used to withholdPhilistines rule Israel 40 years (13:1) – strength used to dominateStrength used to oppress
B – Barren MotherRebekah barren → Isaac prays → twinsStrength begins in prayerManoah’s wife barren → angel → SamsonStrength begins in vow
C – Marked at BirthEsau born red, all over like a hairy cloak (25:25)Hair = wild, murderous strengthSamson born under Nazirite vow – hair never cutHair = consecrated strength
D – Seeing Water Where Others See NoneIsaac re-digs Abraham’s wells, then digs new ones in desert where Philistines say “there is no water” (26:19–22)Strength = faith to see hidden lifeSamson’s hair regrows in darkness (16:22) → water of life returnsStrength = faith to believe life can return
E – Binding & BetrayalEsau’s blessing stolen while he is out hunting (27:30–40) – identity murderedHair (Esau’s mark) tied to stolen destinyDelilah binds Samson, weaves his seven locks into loom, cuts hair (16:13–19)Hair literally bound and cut
D’ – Strength RestoredIsaac digs again at Beer-Sheva → God appears → “I am with you” (26:24–25)Strength = covenant renewalHair begins to grow again → Samson prays → pillars fall (16:22–30)Strength = covenant renewal
C’ – Legacy of the HairEsau’s hairy/red line becomes Edom – eternal enemyHair = curse of rageSamson’s hair regrows → judges Israel, ends 40-year oppressionHair = blessing of redemption
A’ – End of 40-Year CyclePhilistines make peace treaty with Isaac (26:28–31) – water flows againStrength ends oppressionSamson’s death crushes Philistine rulers – 40-year yoke brokenStrength ends oppression

What Strength Really Means

Isaac digs wells in a desert where everyone else says, “There is no water.” That is not a weakness. That is Samson-level strength — but turned outward to give life instead of taking it.

Samson uses his strength to tear lions, carry gates, and kill thousands. Isaac uses his to tear open the earth and give water to the very people who hate him.

Both men are bound:

  • Esau’s hair is his identity — stolen by deception.
  • Samson’s hair is his identity — stolen by betrayal.

Both men are blind:

  • Isaac is literally blind when he blesses Jacob.
  • Samson was literally blinded in Gaza.

Both men die (symbolically) and are reborn:

  • Isaac “dies” on the altar, resurrected by the ram.
  • Samson “dies” when his hair is cut, resurrected when it regrows.

The Sixth Commandment is not just “don’t kill the body.” It is not to murder a soul’s purpose.

Esau wanted to murder Jacob’s body. Jacob murdered Esau’s destiny. Delilah murdered Samson’s calling.

Isaac and Samson show the only cure: Use your strength from above, Samson-level strength. Do not dominate. Instead, dig wells for your enemies.

Because real strength is not how many Philistines you can crush. It is how many times you can be filled in… and still dig again.

That is the missing biography of Isaac. That is the secret of Samson. That is the Sixth Commandment hidden in Toldot.

Next in series: Essay 7 – The Seventh Commandment in Toldot: “Do Not Commit Adultery” – Esau’s Wives, Samson’s Women, and the Battle for Covenant Seed

Shabbat Shalom, [Chazzan Gavriel] Kohen – descendant of Aaron through the Diaz Ramirez line Beit HaShoavah – https://beithashoavah.org

A Letter from a Kohen to Kohen: A Letter from One Kohen to Another: Why I Cannot Accept the New Testament

My fellow descendant of Aaron,

We both carry the same unbreakable covenant:

“You and your sons with you shall keep your priesthood. It is an eternal covenant of salt before Hashem to you and your descendants” (Numbers 18:7,19).

No verse in Tanakh ever says this covenant will end. No prophet ever said a new non-Levitical priesthood would replace us. Yet the New Testament claims exactly that. Here, plainly and with love, is why I, a Kohen still standing at the altar of Torah, must reject it.

1. Melchizedek Is Shem’s Son of Noah – Not a New Priesthood

Every major Jewish source identifies Melchizedek with Shem:

  • Talmud Nedarim 32b
  • Targum Yonatan Genesis 14:18
  • Rashi, Ibn Ezra, Ramban, Radak
  • Rabbi Efraim Palvanov (Mayim Achronim)

Shem was still alive, righteous, and served as Kohen before Matan Torah. There is no prophecy that his priesthood would one day supersede Aaron’s. Psalm 110:4 (“You are a Kohen forever according to the order of Malkizedek”) refers to the future Mashiach ben David who will have certain priestly functions – while the sons of Aaron continue offering sacrifices forever (Ezekiel 44–46; Jeremiah 33:18–22).

2. The Claim That Aaron’s Priesthood Is “Temporary” Contradicts Torah

Hebrews 7 declares Aaron’s priesthood “weak,” “mortal,” and “imperfect,” needing replacement. The Torah calls it חֹק עוֹלָם – an eternal statute that stands as long as heaven and earth (Jeremiah 33:20-21; Malachi 2:4-8). Show me one verse in all of Tanakh that says the covenant with Levi will be broken. There is none.

3. Jeremiah’s “New Covenant” Is NOT the New Testament

Jeremiah 31:31-34 speaks of a renewed covenant written on the heart. Read the very next verses (31:35-37): Israel will cease to be a nation only when sun, moon, and stars cease. The same prophet repeats in 33:17-22 that both the Davidic throne and the Levitical priesthood will last forever. The “new covenant” is the same Torah internalized in the Messianic era – not a new religion that abolishes Shabbat, kashrut, or the Temple service.

4. The Chiastic Structure of Genesis 14 & 2 Samuel 24 Needs No New Testament

Rabbi Efraim Palvanov (timestamp 56:42) shows the perfect chiasm between Avraham meeting Malkizedek and David meeting Araunah:

| A | War → Plague | B | Victory → Repentance | X | Priest-king of Shalem bows & offers bread-wine / threshing floor | B’ | Avraham refuses spoils → David insists on paying | A’ | Eternal altar established on the Foundation Stone |

This chiasm closes inside Tanakh. The sparks of Shem → Malkizedek → Araunah → Mashiach are all within the Jewish doctrine of gilgulim taught by the Zohar and the Ari – no outside book required.

5. Every “Proof Text” Collapses Under Hebrew Scrutiny

  • Isaiah 7:14 → a young woman (almah) giving birth in Ahaz’s days, not a virgin
  • Isaiah 53 → the servant is explicitly Israel (see 41:8, 44:1, 49:3)
  • Psalm 22 → David describing his own suffering
  • Daniel 9 → the “anointed one cut off” is the last Jewish king, not a crucifixion

The list goes on. I have the receipts in the original Hebrew.

My Brother, the Altar Still Burns

Our job as Kohanim is to keep the fire alive until Mashiach comes – a Torah-observant king from the seed of David who will rebuild the Temple and cause the Kohanim to once again offer korbanot “according to the Torah of Moshe” (Ezekiel 43-46).

Until that day I remain in the same service Pinchas and Elazar kept.

With deepest respect and love from one Kohen to another,

Chazzan Gavriel ben David, still guarding the eternal covenant of salt.

Return to the Rock: What Did Adam Really Look Like According to the Torah?

Adam and Eve the Light

Every Christian knows the words of Yeshua: “Whoever builds on sand will fall. Whoever builds on the Rock will stand.”

But which Rock? The Torah declares again and again: “He is the Rock, His work is perfect… The Rock that bore you… Their Rock is not like our Rock” (Deuteronomy 32:4, 18, 31)

Only the Torah stood in Gan Eden. Only the Torah saw Adam before the sin. The Torah has guarded the true answer for 3,327 years. It did so with the living chain of Jewish tradition. This happened before a single page of the New Testament existed.

Let the Rock speak.

1. Adam Was Formed from the Temple Mount Itself

“And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground (adamah)” (Genesis 2:7)

The Midrash (Pirkei d’Rabbi Eliezer 12, Zohar I:34b) teaches: Hashem took that dust from the exact location. It was from the future Altar of Atonement. It is the Foundation Stone (Even ha-Shetiyyah) on Mount Moriah. That is the same stone David bought from Araunah the Jebusite (2 Samuel 24). It is also the stone on which the Holy of Holies was built.

Adam was literally created from the Rock.

2. Adam Was Originally Male and Female in One Body

“Male and female He created them… and He called their name Adam” (Genesis 5:2)

Talmud (Berachot 61a, Eruvin 18a) and Zohar explain: The first human being was androgynous. It was one creature with two faces, joined back-to-back. Only later did Hashem cast a deep sleep upon Adam and separate Chavah (Eve) from his side (tzela).

The original Adam perfectly reflected the absolute Unity of the One God who has no division.

3. Adam Was Clothed in Primordial Light – Not Skin

Before the sin the Torah uses the word אוֹר (Ohr = Light). After the sin it writes עוֹר (ʿOr = skin) with an ʿayin (Genesis 3:21).

This is the open teaching of:

  • Zohar
  • Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto
  • The Vilna Gaon
  • Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan
  • Rabbi Akiva Tatz
  • Rabbi Efraim Palvanov (see timestamp 1:14 in his Jerusalem lecture)

Adam’s “garments” were pure Ohr Ein Sof – Infinite Divine Light. His body was translucent, radiant, glowing with the Shechinah itself. The Talmud states his heel alone outshone the sun (Chullin 60b). His stature reached from earth to the heavens (Chagigah 12a).

That is what Adam really looked like.

4. Our Eternal Mission: Turn Skin Back into Light

Hashem placed Adam in the Garden “to work it and to guard it” (l’ovdah u’l’shomrah – Genesis 2:15). Those exact words are used only one other place in the entire Torah. They describe the service of the Kohanim and Levi’im in the Mishkan and Temple (Numbers 3:7-8, 8:26, 18:5-6).

Adam was creation’s first High Priest. Every mitzvah we perform adds another thread of light. Every Shabbat we keep does the same. Every act of kindness contributes even more. Eventually, the entire world becomes the Garden once again.

A Loving Challenge to My Christian Friends

You say you build your house on the Rock. Then why do you ignore the Rock’s own description of Adam? Why do you accept 300–400 “fulfilled prophecies” that collapse the moment you read the Hebrew context?

We have the receipts:

  • Isaiah 7:14 – almah = young woman, not virgin; prophecy given to King Ahaz in his lifetime
  • Isaiah 53 – the suffering servant is explicitly named “Israel” and “Jacob” in the surrounding chapters
  • Psalm 22 – David’s own words about his persecution
  • Zechariah 12:10 – mourning for the fallen of Megiddo, not a crucifixion

The Torah never speaks of a divine man-God, never abolishes itself, never transfers the eternal covenants.

The Rock has never moved.

Come Home to the Real Adam

Leave the shifting sand of later interpretations. Come stand with the Jewish people on the Rock that bore Adam from its very dust.

Together – Jews keeping 613, righteous Gentiles keeping the 7 Noahide laws – we will clothe this dark world in light again, until:

“The earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of Hashem as the waters cover the sea.” (Habakkuk 2:14)

May we merit to see the day. Every human being will shine with the same primordial light. This light once clothed Adam.

With boundless love from a Jew still guarding the same Torah his fathers received at Sinai,

Chazzan Gavriel ben David

Shabbat Was Never Just for the Jews – It Was Given to All the Children of Noah

Shabbat for all mankind

Most Jews will tell you a non-Jew is not allowed to keep Shabbat. Most Christians will tell you the Sabbath was nailed to the cross and replaced by Sunday. Most Muslims will tell you the real Shabbat is Friday.

All three are wrong. The proof is hidden in plain sight. It lies in the mirror between the Seven Days of Creation and the Seven Stages of the Flood.

Rabbi David Fohrman explains in his breathtaking Aleph Beta series “Noah & the Flood: The Second Creation.” He argues that the entire Flood narrative is a deliberate replay of Genesis 1. However, this time, the world is re-created for all of people, not just Israel.

Day of CreationGenesis 1Flood ParallelWho Receives the Sign?
Day 1 – Light / Darkness“Let there be light” – Spirit hovers over the face of the watersGenesis 8:1 – “A wind from God hovered over the face of the waters” – total darkness, voidAll living creatures
Day 2 – Separation of watersFirmament separates waters from watersWaters above and below separated again
Day 3 – Dry land & vegetationDry land appears, seed-bearing plantsDove returns with olive leaf – first sign of dry land and vegetation
Day 4 – Sun, moon, stars for seasons“For signs and for seasons”Genesis 8:22 – “Seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter… shall not cease” – the rainbow covenantAll descendants of Noah
Day 5 – Birds & sea creatures“Let the waters swarm… let birds fly”First to leave the ark: creeping things, birds, swarming creatures
Day 6 – Land animals & manBeasts, cattle, and man in God’s image – “Be fruitful and multiply”Animals leave, then Noah’s family – but they separate (violating “be fruitful”)
Day 7 – God rests“God blessed the seventh day and made it holy”Genesis 9 – Rainbow covenant: “I will establish My covenant with you and all flesh” – an eternal signEvery human being

The rainbow is the ot — the eternal sign — of the seventh day for all the children of Noah. And the last time I checked, every male on earth descends from Shem, Ham, or Japheth — Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson’s Y-chromosome research in Traced proves it.

Charlie Kirk, in his book Real Citizenship, writes: “God gave the rainbow as a universal covenant. It was not given to one nation, but to every living creature. The Sabbath rest was baked into that covenant before Sinai ever happened.”

Yet today: • Some rabbis declare a gentile may not keep Shabbat (a tragic over-correction against missionary theft). • Christians move the day to Sunday — the only day in Creation week never called “good.” • Muslims change it to Friday, which is Day Six. This day represents the beast and man’s animal nature. It is also the very day the Torah warns against murder (Sixth Commandment).

We sing every Shabbat morning in VeShamru. This passage is found in Exodus 31:16–17: וְשָׁמְרוּ בְנֵי־יִשְׂרָאֵל אֶת־הַשַּׁבָּת… כִּי אוֹת הִיא בֵּינִי וּבֵין בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל לְעֹלָם. “The children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath.” It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel forever.

But read the Hebrew carefully — the word בֵּינִי (“between Me”) appears twice in the Torah:

  1. Exodus 31 — between God and Israel
  2. Genesis 9 — the rainbow between God and all flesh that is on the earth

Two covenants, one sign.

Rabbi Fohrman’s conclusion is shattering: The Flood was not destruction — it was re-creation. And the seventh day of that re-creation was given as a gift and responsibility to every human being alive.

So who is right about Shabbat? No religion today. The Torah is.

Shabbat was never taken from the nations — it was stolen by bad theology and fear.

The rainbow still hangs in the sky every seventh day, whispering the same promise it whispered to Noah:

Rest. Remember who made you. Because the world depends on it.

The children of Noah must learn to rest together on the day God actually blessed. They include Jews, Christians, Muslim, and everyone else. Until they do, the Flood’s waters of chaos will keep rising.

Related essays on beithashoavah.org • Essay 4 – The Fourth Commandment in Toldot: The First Shabbat in Exile. Why Does God Play Favorites? The Silence Cain Heard Wrong • The Rainbow Covenant Science Cannot Erase (Dr. Jeanson & Genesis 9)

Shabbat Shalom — to all the children of Noah, [Your Name] Kohen, descendant of Aaron Beit HaShoavah – Return, Repent, Rejoice

(Publish this as a separate post — it’s too explosive to bury. Link it right after Essay 4 with: “And if you think Shabbat belongs only to the Jews… read this.”)

The Fourth Commandment in Toldot: “Stay With Laban a Few Days” – The First Shabbat in Exile

fourth-commandment-in-toldot-shabbat-exile.jpg

Most people think the Sabbath commandment began with thunder and smoke at Sinai.

It didn’t.

It began with a terrified Jewish boy running for his life and his mother whispering the Fourth Commandment in Toldot:

“Stay with Laban a few days until your brother’s fury subsides.” (Genesis 27:44)

Rabbi David Fohrman reveals the exact Hebrew parallel:

Sinai (Exodus 20:8–11)Toldot (Genesis 27:44)
זָכוֹר אֶת־יוֹם הַשַּׁבָּת לְקַדְּשׁוֹ “Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy”שֵׁב יָמִים אֲחָדִים עַד אֲשֶׁר־תָּשׁוּב חֲמַת אָחִיךָ “Stay a few days until your brother’s anger subsides”

The phrase יָמִים אֲחָדִים (“a few days”) is the Torah’s coded language for Shabbat rest in exile.

Why? Because the only other time the Torah uses “a few days” in this exact context is when Pharaoh refuses to let Israel rest, and God answers with the plagues and the very first Shabbat in history (Exodus 5:3 → 7-day cycle). “A few days” = the sacred pause before redemption.

Rivkah is not just giving travel advice. She is commanding Jacob to observe the first Shabbat in exile — to stop running, to rest, to let God fight the battle while he waits.

This is the Fourth Commandment in Toldot: When the world is burning with Esau’s rage, the Jewish response is not more action — it is holy waiting.

Why This Matters for Jewish Chosenness

Every time Christianity or Islam claims the Torah’s commandments while rejecting the Jewish people, they violate the Fourth Commandment in Toldot.

They refuse to “stay a few days” — to pause, to rest, to let the Jewish people carry the burden of exile while the nations rage.

But the Torah says the Sabbath belongs to the family that was told to rest first — in a tent in Beersheba, centuries before Sinai.

As Rabbi Dr. Akiva Tatz teaches: “The Jewish people keep Shabbat, and Shabbat keeps the Jewish people.”

  • Essay 1: The Ten Commandments in Toldot – They Began with Rivkah, Not Sinai
  • Essay 2: The Second Commandment in Toldot – Esau’s Rage and “No Other Gods”
  • Essay 3: The Third Commandment in Toldot – “Why Should I Lose Both of You in One Day?”
  • Why Does God Play Favorites? The Silence Cain Heard Wrong

Next in this 10-part series: Essay 5 – The Fifth Commandment in Toldot: Honoring the Mother Who Risked Everything

Shabbat Shalom from Synagogue Beit HaShoavah who learned to rest in exile, [Chazzan Gavriel ben David] Beit HaShoavah – Return, Repent, Rejoice https://beithashoavah.org

Isaac Returns: Samson as the Akedah Hero Defeating Philistines in Gaza Today

isaac-returns-samson-gaza.jpg

Last week’s Torah reading, Parashat Toldot, left one thread dangling: Isaac. Who is Isaac, really? Isaac is more than just the bound boy on Moriah. He is the eternal symbol of resurrection. He is the son Hashem provides from the past to redeem the future.

As Ephraim Palanov teaches in his visionary lectures, Isaac returns Samson. Samson is the Nazirite judge whose life mirrors the Akedah in a stunning chiastic structure. He rises to shatter Philistine strongholds in Gaza. Modern echoes of this story resound today.

Imagine this: I sit with Martin, a Christian friend who’s heard it all before. “You Jews did wrong,” he says, “and God rejected you.” I nod—Hashem wrote it plainly through Moshe Rabbenu. Judges 13:1 makes it clear. “The people of Israel again did what was evil in the sight of the LORD.” The LORD gave them into the hand of the Philistines for forty years. (וַיֹּסִ֨פוּ֙ בְּנֵ֣י יִשְׂרָאֵ֔ל לַעֲשֹׂ֥ות הָרַ֖ע בְּעֵינֵ֣י יְהוָ֑ה וַיִּתְּנֵ֧ם יְהוָ֛ה בְּיַד־פְּלִשְׁתִּ֖ים אַרְבָּעִ֥ים שָׁנָֽה׃). We know our sins. But then I say, “Martin, I can prove Hashem wrote the Torah in under five minutes. It’s math—divine math that measures the world.”

I point to Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson’s Traced: Human DNA’s Big Surprise, peer-reviewed work from Answers in Genesis. Jeanson maps Y-DNA haplogroups to biblical patriarchs, showing modern men descend from three “fathers”: Shem, Ham, and Japheth—Noah’s sons. But zoom in: Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob form a precise lineage in haplogroup T. This lineage is traceable through mutations. These mutations align exactly with Genesis timelines. How did a shepherd 3,300 years ago encode this? The Torah isn’t myth; it’s a genetic blueprint, proving Hashem’s authorship like E=mc² proves physics. Without our family—Abraham’s seed—your history crumbles. Christians and Muslims quote our verses, but reject the album they’re printed in.

The Torah as Family Album:

Don’t Rewrite Our Pictures

Picture this: You invite me to your home, pull out your family album. We flip to a photo—your grandfather at war, strong, unyielding. I grab it and say, “No, he was weak; your line ended there.” You’d snatch it back, heartbroken. That’s what replacement theology does to us. The Tanakh is Klal Israel’s album: snapshots of triumphs, failures, redemptions. Samson isn’t a fairy tale; he’s a page from Isaac’s chapter, chiastically mirrored to prove Hashem’s promise endures.

In Toldot, Isaac is עקידה (akedah)—bound, silent, offered. Genesis 22: “Take your son, your only son Isaac” (קַח־נָא אֶת־בִּנְךָ אֶת־יְחִידְךָ אֵת אִיִּדְךָ). The knife descends; an angel halts it. Isaac lives, but the near-death echoes eternity. Fast-forward to Shoftim (Judges): Samson, the barren-born Nazirite (like Isaac to Sarah), embodies that akedah in reverse chiastic glory. Ephraim Palanov, in his prophetic teachings, sees Samson as Isaac reborn—Hashem pulling him from history’s grave to judge Philistines, those eternal jealous Cains haunting Gaza.

Chiastic Mirrors:

Hebrew Words Binding Isaac and Samson

The Tanakh’s genius? Chiastic structures—ABCDCBA symmetries where the center (D) pivots revelation. Isaac’s akedah and Samson’s saga interlock like gears in Hashem’s clock. Let’s unpack the Hebrew parallels, drawn from the stories’ linguistic DNA.

A: Barren Womb, Divine Promise Isaac: Sarah’s barrenness (עֲקָרָה, akarah—Genesis 11:30). Hashem promises: “Sarah will bear a son” (יֹלֵד תֵּלֵד בֵּן, Genesis 18:10). Samson: Manoah’s wife barren (עֲקָרָה, Judges 13:2). Angel echoes: “You will conceive and bear a son” (הָרָה תַּהַרִי וְיָלַדְתְּ בֵּן, Judges 13:3). Same root: הרה (harah)—conception as miracle. Chiastic pivot: From sterility to seed, Hashem chooses the impossible.

B: Binding Vows and Tests Isaac: Bound on the altar (וַיַּעַקְדוּ אֶת־יִצְחָק, vayya’akdu et-Yitzchak—Genesis 22:9). עקד (aked)—to bind, echoing akarah. Samson: Nazirite vow binds him (נָזִיר אֱלֹהִים, nazir Elohim—Judges 13:5). His life a test: Delilah’s “Tell me” (הַגִּידָה לִּי, haggidah li—Judges 16:6) mirrors Abraham’s silence. Hebrew twist: Samson’s locks (נֵזֶר, nezer—crown of binding) fall, unbound like Isaac’s ram-horn echo.

C: Philistine Jealousy as Cain’s Rage Isaac: Abimelech’s men envy wells (וַיִּקְנְאוּ, vayyikne’u—Genesis 26:14). Philistines fill them with dirt—jealousy like Cain’s (קַיִן, kayin—root of acquisition/envy). Samson: Philistines rage at his riddles, weddings (וַיִּחֲרוּ, vayyicharu—burn with anger, Judges 14:19). Gaza today? Same soil, same seething—Philistines reborn in jealousy, listening to emotions over Hashem. As in Toldot’s Esau (red Esau, אֱדוֹם—root of blood rage), they covet the blessing.

D: The Center—Resurrection and Redemption Here the chiasm peaks: Isaac “dies” on the altar, rises redeemed (ram provided, אַיִּל, ayil—Genesis 22:13). Samson, blinded in Gaza, prays: “Let me die with the Philistines” (תֵּת־נָא מוֹתִי, tet-na moti—Judges 16:30). He pushes pillars (עַמּוּדִים, ammudim), temple crashes—killing more in death than life. Hebrew gem: שִׁמְשׁוֹן (Shimshon—“sun-like”) rises at dawn in Gaza (עַזָּה, Azza—“strong”), illuminating akedah’s light. Ephraim Palanov nails it: Isaac’s near-sacrifice births Samson’s final stand—Hashem resurrects the bound son to unbind Israel.

C’: Reversal—Defeating the Jealous Samson burns Philistine fields (וַיִּדְלַק, vayyidalak—Judges 15:5), avenging envy. Isaac re-digs wells (וַיִּגְלֶה, vayyigleh—Genesis 26:18), claiming inheritance. Cain’s dirt-filling reversed: Life from “death.”

B’: Unbinding and Legacy Samson’s hair regrows (וַיִּצְמַח, vayyitzmach—Judges 16:22); unbound, he redeems. Isaac sires twins (וַיִּוָּלֵד, vayyivaled—Genesis 25:26), unbound from barrenness.

A’: Fertile Legacy, Eternal Seed Samson’s line ends childless, but his death seeds Israel’s freedom. Isaac’s seed: Jacob/Israel, the chosen (יַעֲקֹב אֲשֶׁר בָּחַרְתִּיךָ, Ya’akov asher bacharticha—Isaiah 41:8). Full circle: From one barren womb to a nation.

This isn’t coincidence; it’s Hashem’s math—chiastic proof the stories interweave like DNA strands. Videos like Rabbi Fohrman’s Aleph Beta on Samson unpack the vow’s echoes of Isaac’s silence, while deeper dives reveal Gaza’s gates as modern akedah pillars.

Hashem’s Love:

Stronger Than Philistine Rage

To Christians and Muslims: You misuse Isaiah 53—“Who has believed what he has heard from us?… He will surprise many nations. Kings will be silenced because of him” (Isaiah 52:15)—claiming it’s Jesus or Muhammad, not Israel’s remnant. But verse 13 clarifies this important point. “The remnant of Israel shall not do iniquity, nor speak lies. Neither shall a deceitful tongue be found in their mouth” (Zephaniah 3:13, שְׁאֵרִית יִשְׂרָאֵל לֹא־יַעֲשׂוּ עַוְלָה). No deceit—like the Servant with “no deceit in his mouth” (Isaiah 53:9). That’s us, Klal Israel, the light without guile.

Jeremiah 31:3 whispers Hashem’s vow: “With an everlasting love I have loved you” (בְּאַהֲבַת עוֹלָם אֲהַבְתִּיךָ). His words grow truer daily—from Sinai’s thunder to Gaza’s gates. We sin, yes—like the forty years under Philistines. But Isaac returns as Samson: bound, broken, then bursting forth. Ephraim Palanov’s vision? Not fantasy, but Tanakh’s promise—Hashem resurrects our heroes to defeat the jealous, just as David felled Goliath in Gath.

Your faiths borrow our album’s pictures, but can’t narrate the strength in our grandfather’s eyes. We can—because we’re still in the story. Hashem’s math proves it: Three fathers, one chosen line, eternal redemption.

  • Essay 1: The Ten Commandments in Toldot – They Began with Rivkah, Not Sinai
  • Essay 2: The Second Commandment in Toldot – Esau’s Rage and “No Other Gods”
  • Essay 3: The Third Commandment in Toldot – “Why Should I Lose Both of You in One Day?”
  • Why Does God Play Favorites? The Silence Cain Heard Wrong
  • From Crypto-Jewish Mexico to the Torah of My Fathers

Related on Beit HaShoavah:

  • The Cohen Gene – Y-DNA Proof of Aaron’s Line
  • Passover Lamb Was Never Jesus – It Was the Egyptian God

Shabbat Shalom—may Isaac’s strength rise in us all, [Chazzan Gavriel benDavid ] Kohen Descendant, Diaz Ramirez Line Beit HaShoavah – Return, Repent, Rejoice https://beithashoavah.org

Key Takeaways

  • Isaac represents resurrection and redemption, symbolizing Hashem’s eternal promise to Israel.
  • The concept of Isaac returning as Samson illustrates a chiastic relationship in the Tanakh, bridging their stories.
  • Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson’s research links modern DNA to biblical patriarchs, affirming the Torah as a genetic blueprint.
  • Replacement theology distorts the narrative of the Tanakh, which serves as a family album for Klal Israel.
  • Hashem’s love and promise endures, as shown through the lives of Isaac and Samson, resisting opposing forces.

The Third Commandment in Toldot: “Why Should I Lose Both of You in One Day?”

Most Christians and Muslims have never heard this sentence as the Torah intends. The third of the commandments is spoken.

“Why should I be bereaved of both of you in one day?” (Genesis 27:45)

Rivkah is not just a worried mother. She delivers the Third Commandment in Toldot, centuries before Sinai.

The Third Commandment in Toldot – Exact Parallel

Sinai (Exodus 20:7)Toldot (Genesis 27:45)
לֹא תִשָּׂא אֶת־שֵׁם־יְהוָה אֱלֹהֶיךָ לַשָּׁוְא “You shall not take the name of Hashem your God in vain”לָמָה אֶשְׁכַּל גַּם־שְׁנֵיכֶם יוֹם אֶחָד “Why should I lose both of you in one day?” – terror of false oaths causing double death

Rabbi David Fohrman points out: the deepest meaning of “taking God’s name in vain” is not just swearing falsely. It is invoking God’s name to justify something that will bring destruction while pretending it is holy.

Rivkah sees the future clearly: If Esau swears by God to take revenge, and Jacob is forced to defend himself, both sons could die on the same day—one by murder, one by execution. Two corpses because someone used God’s name to sanctify hatred.

That is the ultimate desecration of the Name.

Why This Destroys Replacement Theology

Every time a church taught that “God curses the Jews,” they did exactly what Esau threatened to do. When Islam claimed “the Jews corrupted the Torah,” they acted the same way. They took God’s name in vain. They used Scripture to justify hatred and dispossession.

Rivkah’s cry in Toldot is the Torah’s eternal protest. It stands against every false oath sworn “in the name of God.” These oaths aim to harm Jacob.

As Rabbi Dr. Akiva Tatz teaches: “The Jewish people remain alive for a specific reason. Every attempt to destroy us in God’s name violates the Third Commandment in Toldot.”

  • Essay 1: The Ten Commandments in Toldot – They Began with Rivkah, Not Sinai
  • Essay 2: The Second Commandment in Toldot – Esau’s Rage and “No Other Gods”
  • Why Does God Play Favorites? The Silence Cain Heard Wrong
  • From Crypto-Jewish Mexico to the Torah of My Fathers

Next in this 10-part series: Essay 4 – The Fourth Commandment in Toldot: “Stay a Few Days” – The First Shabbat in Exile

Shabbat Shalom from a Kohen. His mothers never stopped crying this cry. [Chazzan Gavriel ben David] Beit HaShoavah – Return, Repent, Rejoice https://beithashoavah.org

The Second Commandment in Toldot: Esau’s Rage and “You Shall Have No Other Gods”

When the church taught me the Second Commandment was only about statues and idols, I learned something unexpected. I never imagined it was first spoken by a Jewish mother fleeing her own son’s violence.

Yet in Parashat Toldot, centuries before the thunder at Sinai, Rivkah utters the Second Commandment in Toldot almost word-for-word:

“Your brother Esau is comforting himself (מִתְנַחֵם) with the thought of killing you.” (Genesis 27:42)

Rabbi David Fohrman demonstrates that this single sentence is the exact precursor. It leads to “You shall have no other gods before Me.” Esau’s rage is not just anger. It has become his god.

How Esau Became the First Worshipper of “Another God”

In Hebrew, the verb מִתְנַחֵם (mitnachem) means “to comfort oneself.” After losing the blessing, Esau does not turn to Hashem for comfort. He turns to murder.

Murderous hatred becomes his new deity—the very first “other god” in human history after Cain.

Rivkah’s urgent warning to Jacob is therefore the Second Commandment in Toldot in its embryonic form:

Do not serve the god of revenge. Do not let violence sit on the throne where only Hashem belongs.

This is why the Rebecca Jacob Sinai mirror is so devastating to replacement theology. The Second Commandment did not begin with golden calves or Baal statues. It began when a Jewish mother identified the first false god humanity ever worshipped: the god of blood-revenge.

The Chiastic Proof – Side by Side

Sinai (Exodus 20:3)Toldot (Genesis 27:41–42)
לֹא יִהְיֶה־לְךָ אֱלֹהִים אֲחֵרִים עַל־פָּנָיָ “You shall have no other gods before Me”וַיִּתְנַחֵם הוּא לְהָרְגְּךָ “He is comforting himself by killing you” – serving the god of murderous rage

Watch Rabbi Fohrman lay this out:

  • Aleph Beta / YouTube Part 1
  • Aleph Beta / YouTube Part 2

Why This Matters for Jewish Chosenness

Every time Christianity or Islam claims the Torah’s commandments while rejecting the Jewish people, they repeat Esau’s original mistake.

They replace the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob with the god of supersessionist revenge: “The Jews killed our savior” or “The Jews lost their chosenness.” That is modern avodah zarah—serving another god on the very face of the God who spoke to three million Jews at Sinai.

As Chazzan I teach in Esnoga Beit HaShoavah: “We are not hated because we are worse. We are hated because we are the living witness that the Second Commandment in Toldot still applies. There is only one God. He never annulled His covenant with Jacob.”

  • Essay 1: The Ten Commandments in Toldot – They Began with Rivkah, Not Sinai
  • Why Does God Play Favorites? The Silence Cain Heard Wrong
  • From Crypto-Jewish Mexico to the Torah of My Fathers – My Personal Return
  • The Passover Lamb Was Never Jesus – It Was the Egyptian God

Next in this 10-part series: Essay 3 – The Third Commandment in Toldot: “Why Should I Lose Both of You in One Day?”

Shabbat Shalom from the Chazzan carrying the same warning Rivkah gave, [Gavriel ben David ] Beit HaShoavah – Return, Repent, Rejoice https://beithashoavah.org