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If There Was A “God”

It would start with the Hebrew language. Life would start with the Hebrew language. A language that with each letter, a special power was given. Each letter intended to create the minute it was spoken. Before man was the word! And the word was with Yahweh! It would not be long until the wickedness of man would invite the wrath of Yahweh. That wrath would result in the scattering of language itself. From one tongue to seventy tongues just like that! The result, confusion (Babel). Though the Hebrew language would always remain the anointed language of the earth, the thieving mind of man, would attempt to induce words of power into their own languages; the fallen languages; if you will. But the Hebrew language would always be the standard of perfection and as such, the seed for all words that would be spoken on the earth; even the bad seed was a product of the Master’s Hand. We have now passed through to a new place of un-deniability in our understanding of elohiym, a term used to describe idols of men. It is not the word “god,” as the Greeks would profess. Nothing in the Hebrew language would ever give man permission to make such a horrendous leap and more so, to then contrive to commit blasphemy by giving Yahweh Almighty the title; “God.” So where did it come from, this idea of god? Surely it is, in some form or fashion, stolen from the premier language of the earth: Let’s look at a few verses in their original Hebrew dialect and then dig deeper to unveil what is sure to be a profound revealing of historical truth:

Genesis 30:11 – “The Leah said, ‘A troop is coming,’so she called his name Gad.”
Isayah 65:11 – “But you are those who have forsaken Yahweh, who forget My Holy mountain, who prepare a table for a troop and who furnish a drink offering for Meni.”

Let’s first examine all that is revealed in Genesis 30:11:

From the Hebraic intent, we learn that Leah (“weary, exhausted”) offers Zilpah (“distilling, tears”) to Yaaqob (Jacob – “heel catches, recompense”), and Zilpah bears a son named Gad. Of Gad, Leah says, “A troop is coming.” Let’s define terms:
A. Gad – Gad, gawd from guwd, goode; “to crowd, attack”
B. Troop – gad, gawd; “distributing, fortune,” from guwd, goode; “to crowd, attack”

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