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The New Testament abomination directly compares to the slander of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion Czarist secret police forgery employed to justify the Russian pogroms of the late 19th and early 20th Century.
Proverbs 24:12 compares to Ezekiel 18:30-32, where Moshe calls the people to t’shuva and emphasizes the importance of returning to righteousness. Deuteronomy 28 compares to Jeremiah 17:5-8. and Psalms 1.
Exodus 21, which outlines various laws and obligations regarding personal rights and responsibilities, can be compared to specific precedents found in different parts of the T’NaCH. Both Exodus 21 and Deuteronomy contain laws aimed at creating a fair and just society, emphasizing community responsibility. Amos 5:7-12, n this passage, the prophet Amos admonishes Israel for their injustices and highlights the importance of righteousness. Exodus 21 emphasizes obligations to ensure justice, while Amos condemns the failure to uphold those laws, linking legal obligations to prophetic mussar. Micah 6:8, this verse speaks to the requirement of acting justly, loving mercy, and walking humbly with HaShem; humility understood as the dominance of dedicated tohor middot over tuma middot within the opposing Yatzirot within the heart. The essence of legal obligations in Exodus 21 – echoed here, as the Micah דיוק makes a succinct summarization of the prophetic mussar rebuke imperatives that underpin the Torah oath brit common judicial laws which highlight personal responsibility for justice in the oath sworn chosen Cohen lands. Each of these texts reflects these Torah mussar themes of justice, responsibility, and community – a mussar articulated in Exodus 21.
The Torah concepts of responsibility and Torah obligations share absolutely no common denominator-ground with Luke 12:47. Luke 12:47 states, “And that servant who knew his master’s will but did not prepare himself or do according to his will shall be beaten with many stripes.” This nonsense phony declaration has no precedent in T’NaCH literature.
Proverbs 24:12 and Ezekiel 18:30-32 center on the importance of awareness and accountability regarding one’s actions. Both passages urge individuals to recognize their transgressions and remember the oaths sworn by the Avot and consequently return to righteous behavior. Illustrating the fundamental need to remember prophetic mussar rebukes in order to due t’shuva based upon the Torah blessing/curse concerning inheriting the oath sworn lands as the chosen Cohen people who keep and observe their own unique cultures and customs which separate Torah wisdom from Goyim wisdom.
Luke 12:47 does not even imply the need to due t’shuva consequent to hearing prophetic mussar rebukes. Jeremiah warns against reliance on flawed Goyim alien wisdom, instead urging faith in judicial common law courtroom justice. Jeremiah accurately reflect the prophetic mussar theme found in Deuteronomy 28 about the relationship between consequences to the oath brit blessing/curse obligations of life or death which Moshe Rabbeinue cut with the Chosen Cohen people alone. Psalms 1 complements this by expounding on the blessings of living in accordance with Torah Sanhedrin ‘Temple’ courtroom judicial justice-legislative review of all government statute laws.
Exodus 21 outlines specific laws regarding judicial common law justice and personal obligations. The idea of ‘rights’ of citizens, more a 18th Century American and French revolution political idea. Torah faith as the righteous pursuit of justice among our conflicting peoples, resonates throughout T’NaCH texts, such as Amos 5:7-12, where Amos critiques judicial injustices in society and emphasizes the importance of righteous judicial courtroom justice which sanctifies making a fair restoration of damages inflicted by a רשע upon the innocent.
Micah 6:8, summarizing the Torah ideal for its judicial common-law domination over governmental statute laws. Its calls for judicial justice, mercy, and humility, reinforces the priority obligations presented in Exodus 21. The 4th Oral Torah middah רחום learns from Torah תורה בניני אבות of the commandment to uproot the nations of Canaan from the land, the stubborn and rebellious son, the eternal war against Amalek consequent to Jewish avoda zara where Jews lack fear of Elohim consequent to their cultural assimilation to foreign peoples’ customs and cultures and intermarriage with these alien foreign people to reject the revelation of the Torah at Sinai. The middah of רחום completely apart and different from pity. The life/death oath brit flips to Torah curses if Israel behaves like the Canaanite nations or the stubborn and rebellious child or the assimilated ערב רב that came out of Egypt and had no fear of Elohim. Torah curses compare to the guillotine blade that cut off the heads of king Louis XV and Marie Antoinette.
Proverbs 24:12 – t’shuva & accountability, awareness leads to a return to the path of the pursuit of righteous judicial justice among and between the Jewish people. Deuteronomy 28 – Actions of injustice leads to Torah curses raining down upon Israel, comparable to the plagues which afflicted Par’o and Egypt in the days of Moshe and Aaron. Ezekiel 18:30-32 – this prophetic mussar rebukes all generations of Israel – to forever strive to pursue righteous judicial justice – fair compensation of damages – to our people.
Jeremiah 17:5-8, this prophetic mussar provokes Israel to remember the brit of Life or Death as our fear of heaven. Do not rely upon the strength of the Horse to bring salvation. But rather fair judicial courtroom justice among our people – this מלאכה זמן גרמא מצוה creates the guardian תמיד מעשה בראשית – מלאכים which cause Israel to prevail over our enemies during times of war – as the wisdom of the Torah; Goyim wisdom relies primarily upon innovations in warfare. Psalms 1 supports the consequence of righteous judicial justice within the lands of the chosen Cohen peoples’ Republic. The prophetic mussar of Amos 5:7-12 threatens the rebuke of Torah curses of death and g’lut/exile. Whereas Micah 6:8 serves as the prophetic mussar דיוק/inference upon Amos 5:7-12.
Luke 12:47, this: the Protocols of the Elders of Zion Roman forgery, totally and completely alien to prophet T’NaCH mussar. It reflects a different context of responsibility that emphasizes only knowledge dread of the direct consequences of a hierarchical, servant-master relationship. Israel Torah wisdom freed from Egyptian slave bondage, NOT to change one Slave Master for another Slave Master!
The Pie in the Sky New Testament opens with gross false assumptions and comparisons.
Goyim never accepted the revelation of the Torah at Sinai. Hence the false fable of some Universal Monotheistic God as expressed through both the Nicene Creed and Islam’s strict declaration of Allah as the only God — both theological creed belief systems totally reject the Talmudic teaching that only Israel, both Esau and Ishmael, rejected to accept the revelation of the Torah at Sinai. The NT declares prophesy as witchcraft making predictions of future events.
The Koran fraud declares that all prophets come to warn their people by speaking in the language of each and every people. This declaration ignores the Talmudic mussar which teaches that both Esau and Ishmael/Xtianity & Islam fail to validate the revelation of the שם השם as revealed in the first Sinai commandment and therefore violate the 2nd Sinai commandment and worship other Gods. Prior to the Roman NT forgery (Protocols of the Elders of Zion) no person ever perceived the God of Israel as Jesus. The same equally applies to Muhammad’s Allah Universal God.
(Matthew 2:15) “Out of Egypt I called my son”. This NT verse has no connection whatsoever with the Hebrew T’NaCH. Why? Because the term “Son” refers not to a physical son but rather to the Chosen Cohen people beginning with HaShem’s rejection of the korban dedicated to heaven by Cain! Yom Kippur serves as a strong precedent proof. Rosh HaShanah-called יום הזכרון. This and that Chag serve as book-ends.
The t’shuva of ר”ה remembers the sin of the Golden Calf wherein Moshe reminded HaShem of the sworn oath made unto the three Avot that they would father the chosen Cohen people and not Moshe. Yom Kippur HaShem annulled the vow to make of the seed of Moshe the chosen Cohen people. The NT Protocols of the Elders of Zion fraud attempts to substitute JeZeus in the stead of the oath brit cut with the nation of Israel – as the chosen Cohen people, taken out of Egyptian judicial oppression to rule the land of Canaan with righteous judicial common-law courtroom justice which dedicates to make fair compensation of damages the רשע inflicts or imposes upon the innocent.
The central Torah theme of the first born son being the “Cohen” until the sin of the Golden Calf wherein Levi Moshe Rabbeinu replaced as the instructors of the schools of the prophets – the police enforcers of the Sanhedrin courtroom rulings. Prior to the sin of the Golden Calf the firstborn Ishmael rejected as the chosen Cohen. The same applicable to the conflict between Esau and Yaacov and Reuven and Yosef. The attempt by the Protocols of the Elders of Zion New Testament forgery slander fraud to link the Harry Potter imaginary fictional character JeZeus to Hosea 11:1 exceptionally obtuse.
Herod’s Massacre (Verses 16-18), a perverse obtuse comparison of Moshe as a child. Return to Nazareth (Verses 19-23), a perverse obtuse comparison to Moshe at the burning bush. The NT propaganda directly compares to counterfeit money.