Isaiah -The fifth Hebrew gospel - Chapter 3

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Torah to the Tribes

Torah to the Tribes

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 30
@healingmoonbatyashira7225
@healingmoonbatyashira7225 9 ай бұрын
I needed this today! All praises to The Most High Yah 🙏🏾.... I've been isolating myself with Yah and feeling bad about it..... making plans and canceling....lol. Like on some holier than thou... But, I just keep telling them I'm a child of Yah and out of place/set apart in this world. I want nothing to do with it! Just growing and trusting in Yah and stacking shelf stable foods, fire starters, filters, seeds. Nothing compares to the joy i feel when im with Him! HalleluYah
@susan4yahshua
@susan4yahshua Жыл бұрын
Good stuff. I'm listening to u more and more. Tks for your service to YH and the family. :)
@stephaniebarnes7937
@stephaniebarnes7937 Жыл бұрын
Many thanks, Matthew!
@sharmaineSLH
@sharmaineSLH Жыл бұрын
With so many distraction in this world it can be confusing at times, but the Wholeness and Soundness of TMH leads me and I thank my Creator for sending me here today for this message and for you because you didn’t hold back! 🙏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
@suzeauster2223
@suzeauster2223 Жыл бұрын
Greetings ✨From Florida 🐬 Thank You 🙌 Yahs 🔥 Blessings Beloveds 💕
@shawnabeavers3028
@shawnabeavers3028 Жыл бұрын
Loved your message today!funny guy. just wanted to let you know " I'm tracking!!". Thank you for all the work you do for the tribes. I am praying for you and your ministry. Peace be with you in Texas.
@4687878
@4687878 Жыл бұрын
"Help a brother out"..🤎🤎🤎😊....I hear you, Brother..I'll try Shabbat Shalom !!!
@jasonthehigh-priest
@jasonthehigh-priest Жыл бұрын
I'm True and Living
@coldwarunicorns
@coldwarunicorns Жыл бұрын
So Good Matthew!
@kerricraig7417
@kerricraig7417 Жыл бұрын
So good! Bringing Isaiah to life! Thank you Matthew. Blessings
@jonathanwilliams2805
@jonathanwilliams2805 Жыл бұрын
Honorary Brother Richard Nolan Shalom everyone
@stevenqurkel2010
@stevenqurkel2010 Жыл бұрын
All facts! We have to live in the PRIVATE!!! The public will leave you a debt slave
@josemeza7482
@josemeza7482 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your message 📖 so true 🙏🏻
@thrumyeyesmt.6344
@thrumyeyesmt.6344 Жыл бұрын
I’m sad i missed the live😔☝️🙏 but grateful!
@michaelwalter3714
@michaelwalter3714 Жыл бұрын
Thrumyeyes MT, are you in MT?
@thrumyeyesmt.6344
@thrumyeyesmt.6344 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelwalter3714 Michelle Turrey 🙂😔🙏
@WarsunGames
@WarsunGames Жыл бұрын
Never more true words ever spoken.
@WarsunGames
@WarsunGames Жыл бұрын
Actually i found your channel just looking up basic phrases. An i just subbed.
@t4pl334
@t4pl334 Жыл бұрын
Add subtitles, please!
@Matamawan_Sicarii
@Matamawan_Sicarii Жыл бұрын
Turn your closed caption on
@WarsunGames
@WarsunGames Жыл бұрын
1:19:36 No we are still here.
@shannonjohnson3910
@shannonjohnson3910 Жыл бұрын
Transmutation here hanging in and hanging on.
@markdlt2989
@markdlt2989 6 ай бұрын
Were we taking over by mob rule or ruled by the few so called elites? Most even non believers simply want to live in peace and be left alone. Yahs people (narrow way) desire Faith & Obedience to our King.
@ready1fire1aim1
@ready1fire1aim1 Жыл бұрын
*He Who Rides On The Clouds 🌥:* Baal is a western Semitic title that means Master or Lord. While it can actually refer to a large number of different deities, Baal in this case refers to *Hadad,* the Canaanite and Syrian god of rain, fertility, life, agriculture and thunder, particularly popular in *Ugarit and Aleppo.* He was worshipped in many ancient Middle Eastern communities, who considered him one of the most important gods in their respective local pantheons. He was at least in part derived from the Sumerian god Ishkur, but their character differed substantially; while Ishkur represented the destructive power of storms, the western Semitic Baal was the master of *life-giving rains vital for farmers.* Thanks to his huge influence, Baal was designated as the universal god of fertility, and in that capacity his title was Prince, Lord of the Earth. He was also called the Lord of Rain and Dew, the two forms of moisture that were indispensable for fertile soil in Canaan In Ugaritic and Hebrew, Baal's epithet as the storm god was *He Who Rides on the Clouds.* In the Baal (Lord) Cycle he's frequently called "Aliyan Baal" or "Baal, the victorious." In Phoenicia, he was called Baal Shamen, Lord of the Heavens. In Syria, hail was seen as a phenomenon closely related to him. He was also the king of the gods, and, to achieve that position, he was portrayed as seizing the divine kingship from *Yam (or Yaw "YHW"), the sea god, described as a tyrannical ruler.* Baal was probably also regarded as the *source of royal authority for human kings* (like King Hoshea!/Joshua Son of Nun! as told in Samaritan Chronicle), and myths and prayers depict him as an *ally and protector of humans.* In his main myth, the so-called Baal Cycle, Baal was locked in mortal combat with Mot, the personification of death and sterility. If Baal triumphed, humanity would thrive; but, if he were to be vanquished by Mot, humans would suffer and their crops would wither away. While the myths present a decisive conclusion to the conflict, some scholars assume it was believed to repeat in cycles. Like many deities of the ancient Near East, Hadad was always represented in a horned headdress. In art, he's often shown holding a club and thunderbolt or two clubs. While Mesopotamian depictions of the storm god and the famous Baal stele depict him as a typical bearded Near Eastern god, many Canaanite depictions are instead more similar to Egyptian warriror gods and beardless. Baal was also frequently associated with bulls. The bull was a widespread symbol of divinity in ancient Mesopotamia and areas infuenced by it. Other storm gods from cultures closely related to that of ancient Canaan, like Hurrian Teshub and Hittite Tarhunna, were depicted very similarly to Baal in art, and their myths shared many similarities as well. The Egyptian god Set in his generally positive aspect as a god of foreigners was also associated with Baal, taking his role in the Egyptian adaptation of the Yam (Yaw) narrative. Baal is usually associated with the goddesses Ashtart (commonly called "the Face of Baal," indicating particularly close bond between these two deities), a western Semitic equivalent of Ishtar, and Anat, both of who are often interpreted as his consorts. Anat is also called Baal's sister, though it's unclear if they share the exact same parents, as in Ugaritic texts Baal calls two separate gods, El (the husband of Asherah) and Dagan, his fathers. Whether the two fathers were one and the same or if one of these was simply a courtesy title indicating superior status is a matter of scholarly debate, though cultic rather than mythical texts regard Dagan as separate from El. The name Baal, or Ba'al, is used as a substitute of Hadad in some ancient texts and in common modern usage. This is possibly derived from the fact that in ancient Canaan only priests were allowed to utter the divine name, in much the same way as in Judaism where only priests were allowed to utter the name of God, so common people simply referred to him as Baal. It's also possible the title was eventually deemed to be integral to Hadad's cult it functionally became his main name. The word ba'al and its plural form were also used in the Hebrew Bible to refer to cult images, and in this context they were regarded as false gods. *Because of this, several demons were derived from Baal, including Bael and Beelzebub.* Many of the most famous biblical references to Baal, for example the tale of *Jezebel, are related to the traditions of the cities of Sidon and Tyre,* where the title of Baal was applied to *deities other than Hadad.* (Neither Elijah nor Jezebel were good for Israel 🇮🇱 in this story)
@ready1fire1aim1
@ready1fire1aim1 Жыл бұрын
The Jewish tradition of Passover may have begun as a ritual connected with the myth of Mot killing Baal (Hadad). Passover is held at the end of the rainy season, which could symbolize the death of Baal, as he was the god of rain. In the myth, Mot eats Baal like a lamb. During Passover, the priests eat lamb. However, the bones of the lamb are not broken, possibly signifying that Baal will return in the fall. During the festival, the priests prepare the body of the lamb in a similar fashion as Anat kills Mot. The festival may have started with the belief that by participating in the death of Baal, they would insure that rains would not come during the spring, as rain in the spring could ruin the crops. A few references in the Bible also appear to be a memory of Mot, such as vague mentions of seemingly personified death in the books of Hosea, Habakkuk and Jeremiah.
@His1355
@His1355 Жыл бұрын
Can someone tell me how the millennium can come in with the Melchizedek if most of the Melchizedek will be killed? Because I get a sense that now is the time of Esau and then will be the time of Yacob, but how If no one is returning back through the resurrection for 1000years?
@ready1fire1aim1
@ready1fire1aim1 Жыл бұрын
*El* = monotheistic title for God of Bronze Age Israel (hence the name Isra-El). *E source* Yahwism (Uncountable) = *polytheistic religion of Iron Age Israelites* *J source* Is Yahwism (Uncountable) *J source* and Leviathan *P source* in the Ugaritic texts? In 1 Kings 22:19-22 we read of the Yahweh meeting with his heavenly council. This is the very description of heaven which one finds in the Ugaritic texts. For in those texts the sons of god *(Elohim)* are the sons of *El.* Other deities worshipped at Ugarit were *El Shaddai, El Elyon, and El Berith.* Yam, also known as Ym and Yaw (YHW), is the Ugaritic god of rivers and the sea. Also known as Judge Nahar ("Judge River"), he is also one of the *Elohim* or *sons of El,* the name given to the Levantine pantheon. (Adopted?) Others dispute the existence of the alternative names for Yam/Yaw, claiming it is a mistranslation of a damaged tablet. Despite linguistic overlap, *theologically this god is not a part of the later sub regional monotheistic theology, but rather is part of a broader Levantine polytheism.* (Adopted.) He is also known from Egyptian sources, which present him as an enemy of Set (at the time viewed as a heroic *slayer of monsters* and similar to Levantine and Anatolian weather gods). Yam is the deity of primordial chaos and represents the power of the sea, untamed and raging; he is seen as ruling storms and the disasters they wreak. The *seven-headed dragon* Lotan is associated closely with him and the *serpent* is frequently used to describe him. Despite his antagonistic role in myths, Ym was sometimes invoked in theophoric names, indicating some degree of cult, which sets him apart from another similar figure, Tiamat. As Ym's myth is generally believed to be older than the Enuma Elish, it's possible Tiamat was partially patterned *after* him. Of all the gods, despite being the *champion of El,* Ym holds special hostility against *Baal Hadad, son of Dagon (or El).* Ym is a deity of the sea and his palace is in the *abyss* associated with the depths, or Biblical tehwom, of the oceans. (This is not to be confused with the abode of Mot, the ruler of the netherworld.) In Ugaritic texts, Ym's special enemy Hadad is also known as the *"king of heaven" and the "first born son" of El,* whom ancient Greeks identified with their god Cronus, just as Baal was identified with Zeus, Yam with Poseidon and Mot with Hades. (Trinity of Sons of God under God) While Baal Hadad was the lead god in Ugarit, in the Baal cycle it is Ym who is favored by El, and he even briefly rules over the other gods. Baal only rises to power after vanquishing him with the help of his allies Kothar-wa-Khasis, Astarte and Anat. Yam's ultimate fate is unclear, as the text makes references to both death and captivity, and in later sections of the myth Baal talks about Yam as if he was *still alive and a possible threat.* While in the past researchers, especially those belonging to the myth-ritual tradition, interpreted the myths of Baal, Ym and Mot as a representation of the cycle of seasons and thus related to fertility rites, this view is challenged in more recent scholarship as incorrect or simplistic. His name comes from the Canaanite (Israelite) word Yam, meaning "Sea."
@ready1fire1aim1
@ready1fire1aim1 Жыл бұрын
The Sea Peoples are a hypothesized seafaring confederation that attacked ancient Egypt and other regions in the East Mediterranean prior to and during the Late Bronze Age collapse (1200-900 BCE). Compare these two verses: 2 Samuel 24: 1 Again the anger of the Yahweh burned against Israel, and he incited David against them, saying, “Go and take a census of Israel and Judah.” Compare to: 1 Chronicles 21:1 Satan rose up against Israel and incited David to take a census of Israel.
@donnalee7322
@donnalee7322 Жыл бұрын
I can’t thank you enough. I just watched the Melchizedek Connection. Awesome 🤩 I have a question. Where do I go to get baptized? I want so much to learn all I can. Thank you Matthew for all you do. May Elohim continue to bless you. 🙏👑🧖‍♂️🧖🏻💍✈️🕊️🦋☁️😇🎺🎺🎺. Loved those red disco shoes. 😅
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