The Selective Use

How the Tradition Accepted Paleo-Hebrew Pictographic Readings Everywhere They Agreed and Rejected Them Precisely Where They Point to Yeshua

They did not reject the method. They filtered it. Accepted where it served. Dismissed where it declared the Son. The filter itself is the evidence.

Part 7 of 9

(Special thanks to MWM Contributor, Lisa MacPeek)

 

A Method Cannot Be Both Reliable and Unreliable

The Paleo-Hebrew pictographic alphabet is the alphabet Moshe used when he wrote the Torah. Its letter forms are established in the archaeological record, proto-Sinaitic inscriptions from Sinai itself, the Samaritan Torah in continuous use, the Dead Sea Scrolls writing the divine name in Paleo-Hebrew inside square-script manuscripts, hundreds of seals and inscriptions spanning a thousand years...    see more >>

Bereshit and YHWH

The Declaration and the Name
What the First Word and the Divine Name Say Together

The first word of the Torah declares what the Son will do. The name of YHWH declares who he is. Together they are one announcement, written before anything was made, silenced by the tradition that was supposed to carry them, restored now in full.

Part 8 of 9

(Special thanks to MWM Contributor, Lisa MacPeek)

 

Two Declarations

One Announcement

This series has moved through the first word of the Torah letter by letter, layer by layer. Bereshit. The Son declared in the first two letters. The covenant framing the word from outside in. God and destruction at the center. The hand and the cross closing the word. The house enlarged at the opening. The nail at the center of the entire Torah. The Aleph-Tav standing silent in the fourth position...    see more >>

What Was Written

Before Anything Was Made

The gospel is not the conclusion the covenant history arrives at. It is the first word. Written before God is named. Written before light is called.
Written before anything was made that was made.

Part 9 of 9

(Special thanks to MWM Contributor, Lisa MacPeek)

 

Before the First Sentence Was Finished

The Torah begins with one word. Bereshit. In the beginning. That is what every translation renders. That is the surface of what the word says.

But the surface is not the depth. And this series has spent nine documents going below the surface, into the letters, into the pictures, into the architecture of the word itself, to read what Moshe actually wrote when he drew the first word of the covenant...    see more >>