Comments

Replacement Theology and the New Age — No Comments

  1. Isa_45:7 I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.

    Exo_32:14 And the LORD repented of the evil which he thought to do unto his people.
    Exo_32:12 Wherefore should the Egyptians speak, and say, For mischief did he bring them out, to slay them in the mountains, and to consume them from the face of the earth? Turn from thy fierce wrath, and repent of this evil against thy people.

  2. Hi Mr. Still Man, whew, I just read this exchange with Chuck, and now I can see why you seemed so exasperated with me in my earlier posts, lol. While I am in no way a Hebrew Israelite, (and I’m not saying Chuck is either) I see similarities in both his post and mine. I can’t help but wonder if Black people are also the “true Jews”. I say this for the following reasons:

    1. Biologically, archeologically and geographically speaking, it is highly probable the original man (Adam) would be Black, since Black or African genes are the most diverse — thus having the ability to produce other races. African genetic diversity is a scientific fact.

    2. If Adam was Black, then likely post flood, Noah and his 3 sons were also Black. Remember, no one denies Ham being Black, therefore, Shem, Japheth, and Noah were likely Black as well. Before the Tower of Babel, the whole earth was one race and one language (Gen 11:1, 6).

    3. If you look at a map of the Table of Nation in Genesis 10, you will see that the Hamites (Africans) and Shemites (Hebrews) settled around and amongst each other. The bible is replete with scripture showing the continual interaction, intermixing and intermingling of these two nations, so much so, they were often mistaken for one another. For instance:
    – Joseph wasn’t recognized by his brothers in Black Egypt (Gen 42:8)
    – Joseph and his brothers were called “Egyptians” when they went to Caanan bury their
    father Jacob (Gen 50:11)
    – Moses, a Hebrew male child, was able to go undetected in the (Black) Pharaoh’s
    palace, and be raised as a Hamite child (Exodus 2:10)
    – Moses was called an “Egyptian” by Zipporah and her sisters (Exodus 2:16)
    – Paul is mistaken for an “Egyptian” by the Roman chief captain (Acts 21:38)

    4. Several times, the Hebrews used the term “Black” to refer to their physical
    state/skin color
    – Lamentation 4:8 their visage face is blacker than coal
    – Lamentation 5:10 our skin was black like an oven
    – Job 30:30 my skin is black upon me

    5. Just look at the stunning reliefs of the Hebrews of Lashich in Assyrian captivity.
    These drawings show Hebrew men with curly peppercorn hair, as well as clearly
    locked hair, along with full lips and broad noses

    6. Simeon called Niger, one of the early church fathers was clearly a Hebrew man
    (Simeon is a Hebrew name), but he’s called “Niger” b/c he was distinctively Black
    (Acts 13:1)

    7. Ancient Christian art depicts the Hebrews as a very dark-skinned people. In fact the
    earliest images of Jesus show a very dark-skinned man surrounded by other very
    dark skinned people, thus the origin of the Black Madonna. These images have
    undergone a major whitewashing and iconoclasm over the years, but many of the
    originals still remain in museums all over the world and catacombs of early Rome.

    8. There is a famous paragraph of Tacitus, an ancient historian and contemporary of
    Josephus, who suggested that the origins of the Hebrews were from Ethiopia or
    Egypt. He said a mouthful, but in the interest of brevity, this is basically the crux of it.

    9. Josephus, an eyewitness to the destruction of the second temple, and author of The
    Great Roman-Jewish War 66-70, writes about this Jewish dispersion and captivity:
    “General Vaspasian and his son Caesar Titus fought against the Jews. Millions of
    Jews fled into Africa, among other places, fleeing from Roman persecution and
    starvation during the siege.”

    10. The images of Jesus on gold coins during Roman emperor Justinian’s reign in the
    500s. The Cambridge Encyclopedia has this particular listing about that image on
    the coin: “Whatever the fact, this coin, with the straight haired Justinian on the
    obverse side, places beyond doubt the belief that “Jesus” was a Negro (black-
    skinned)”

    11. 18th century Afrian maps depicting locations such as”Lamlam” near Timbuktu
    “Falafjam” along the Gold Coast, and “the Kingdom of Juda” in the Songhai, clearly
    marking them as exiled Jewish settlements.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>