Legal Law

Attacking the Child Jesus and 3 Christmas myths: Bad timing, cultural baggage and wrong name!

  1. Bad moment. You may already know that the winter solstice was celebrated as the birth of Tammuz, conceived by Semiramuz and Nimrod (Google). The shepherds did not “live in the fields” in winter. Biblical clues support Christ’s birth in the fall at the Feast of Tabernacles. It is an 8-day commemoration of Israel’s sojourn in the wilderness that also fits the “tabernacle” of Christ with us. Described in Leviticus 23, it had a special focus on the first and eighth days. From a Christian point of view, Christ was born the first and circumcised on the eighth day as was every Jewish boy.

  2. Bad luggage. A fifth grader asked his teacher what Jeremiah meant: “Do not learn the way of the pagans … The customs of the people are vain … One cuts a tree from the forest … They adorn it with silver and with gold. “Jeremiah 10: 2-4. The only birthday celebrations in the Bible were bad events. John the Baptist was beheaded in celebration of Herod’s birthday and a baker was hanged on Pharaoh’s birthday. Maybe we should stop celebrating ourselves. Children can have healthy self-esteem without an ego trip that makes them self-centered and the focus of everything.

  3. Incorrect identification. The name of Jesus is false! There was no letter “J” in Greek or Hebrew, so it cannot be correct. Christ gave us an important clue when he said: “I have come in the name of my Father and you do not receive me. If another comes in his own name, you will receive him.”

    If the Father’s name was Zeus, then they say the name of Christ in Italy when they pronounce it as “Yes, Zeus” (Iesous). In Latin America, they pronounce it as “Hey Zeus.” We say Gee Zus. But the Father’s name was not Zeus, the god of Greek mythology who saved everyone without regret. God saves, but we must be willing to repent.

    Philosophically, Jesus fills the bill for billions of people who mystically want to be saved, but who have no interest in repenting of their works; it is human nature to please our sins. The cross means considering ourselves dead to sin and alive to Christ, totally alien to too many “Christians”!

    Support for the above concept is found in Acts 13: 6,8 where Bar-jesus means sorcery. “Bar” means son of, so Jesus is son of sorcery. To understand how this name came to the Bible as the name of the Savior, we should ask the Jesuits. His name means the Society of Jesus and the Vatican, a word that means “divining serpent”, worships Lucifer as the father of Jesus, http://vimeo.com/85267101 For a better understanding of the true name of Christ, visit http : // en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeshua_(name)

So what do we do? We cannot live in a vacuum. We should replace what is “bad” above with what is good. The Feast of Tabernacles (and all the “appointed times” of Leviticus 23) were not only commemorative but prophetic and therefore instructive to us. Israel not only left Egypt to live in huts or tents in the desert, but the apostle Paul said: “All these things happened to you as examples and are written for our warning about those who have come to the ends of the world.” 1 Corinthians 10: 1,11.

Regarding the end times, Paul said: The day of the Lord comes as a thief in the night with sudden destruction … like the delivery of a pregnant woman. 1 Thessalonians 5: 1-6. We should be expecting a sudden calamity as a pretext for martial (military) law and loss of freedom. This is probably what Christ meant when he warned us to flee when we see the abomination “standing where it should not”, Mark 13; 14.

“Stopping where you shouldn’t” is what we see with SWAT teams breaking down doors and checking points so that one can no longer travel without “showing me their papers” (Nazi Germany). We are not far from that, and Christ said to flee. Those who don’t can become subjects of the Novus Ordo Seclorum (New Order of the Ages: words under the pyramid on our $ 1 bill). Fleeing to rural places will not be easy, so perhaps we should think a little before events take us by surprise, as Scripture implies that it will do so for most …

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