December 3 2025

He Is My Destiny How Religions Distort God's Word! The Two Adams Was Adam the First Man? My Spiritual Journey MY TESTIMONY! My Visions & Dreams WISDOM FROM ABOVE! The Bible is The True Word of God! Refuting The Trinity The ONE and ONLY true God, YHWH HOW TO BE ONE WITH GOD & CHRIST! 1st & 2nd Death Explained Are You Enlightened? Meaning Of The Spiritually Discerned "Dashing Babies Heads Against a Stone" Explained Whoever is found without sin can cast the 1st stone! THE LAND OF ISRAEL THE RIGHT HAND OF GOD EDUCATIONAL VIDEOS Who Created Hamas? Contact



About the land of Israel according to Gods' promise, a covenant between God and His people.

 

"Which of the lands did Jacob and his family proceed from to go into Egypt? And from which land did his children proceed, as well as to come into the promised land, called the holy land!" Likewise, from which land did the Jews proceed to go into Europe, and to be returned to as their ancestral land? Because the names given to the land were always referred to its owner or the tribes in the land. For example, when it was called Canaan, the land was because God gave it to Caine but, but later it was taken and given over to Abraham. However, Abraham didn't rename it because Isaac was to inherit it from him according to the Covenant that God supposed to have had with Isaac, and so did Isaac as well not rename the land, as he was to pass it to his son Esau, of which Jacob denied Esau such inheritance.

But Esau indeed later claimed the land because; in a family, when the father's dead, the first son automatically became the father of the house (by birth order according to The Spirit and not through the flesh), of which Jacob then had to buy the land to inherit it, adding to the blessing of the land from his father, and of the promise of God to the land according the Covenant that He had bestowed unto him Jacob/Israel. Because even the children of Lot who were also his grandchildren at the same time, had their names called to the land and so was Jacob, Israel is the name of his, 'the land is the land of Israel even as Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, who were Israel's first, second, and third sons, didn't inherit the land from their father but Judah did, just as his father took the birth right of Esau Judah also became the first not the fourth; and be the father of all the children of Israel.

What this mean is, that the name "Palestine" is not a name of anyone in the land, but only a British-mandated name for all those who were in the land during the conquest.

Because we've seen Levi and Benjamin emerge together with Judah and become Jews as the people of Judea. At the same time, the other nine of their brethren scattered all over the world. For them to return to the land of Israel and live among their brethren, in their ancestral land, they'll have to adopt the Jewish tradition and abide with the Jewish's law, religion, and become Jews, then," all these useful ignorant are having the guts to tell them to go back to where they come from as if the children of Israel had any other place that they came from rather then Judea in the land of Israel!"

Why can't they also say to the Jews, Go back to Egypt, because 70% of the Hebrews were born and bred in Egypt? And why not Saudi Arabia or Yemen, Iran or Iraq, and even Morocco, but only Europe? Is it because all these other countries are their Arab Muslim countries as Europe isn't, but an Infidel's country to them?

Because the land of Israel is a blessing to all those who want to live in the land in peace with the people of the land whom God has given the land unto. Of which the land is also a curse to those who don't want the children of Israel in the land, just as the Amalekites, Philistines, or the Pharaoh who didn't want to let go of the children of Israel to proceed into the holy land.

And yes, of course, women and children may die when it comes to fighting for the land, but it's God Who gives us the children, and if they happen to be killed, isn't it that their souls return to their Creator, not to us mankind, because these are the reasons why God says: Thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt love one another as thyself. Thou shalt forgive, even thy enemies. Thou shalt not judge, and by this, thou shalt not be judged as well. Thou shalt not bear false witness. "Just as the Palestinians are doing, and the world's also doing the same for the Palestinians." And thou shalt worship God alone because even one of these commands can deny one's entrance into the Kingdom of God?

"Didn't women and children die alongside those of the flood of Noah, Sodom and Gomorrah, in Egypt during Pharaoh's time, and of the Amalekites, has God put their deaths' burdens upon any of us?" Then why should anyone take another person's life in return for being oppressed by the other instead of doing likewise? Which is to also oppress those who oppressed him or her according to the law of Moses! Or, forgive, and love one another according to the Ten Commandments?

If we say we know God and understand what God wanted from us from the beginning, then we should practice what God is telling us to do on earth to be able to inherit His Kingdom in Heaven. Because the books of Isaiah actually tells us what God wants and demands of us to do!

The main message of Isaiah is one of hope and redemption, as it balances warnings of God's judgment for sin with promises of future salvation through a coming Messiah. The book calls people to repent and return to God, emphasizing that despite humanity's unfaithfulness and the resulting consequences, God's covenant faithfulness remains, offering healing, forgiveness, and the establishment of a new kingdom through His anointed servant.

* Judgment and Sin: The book begins with sober accounts of Israel's sin, particularly social injustice, and warns of coming punishment. It describes judgment not only for the people of Israel but also for other nations that oppose God by practicing pagan rituals and traditions instead, as seen in the fall of Babylon.

* Repentance and Holiness: Isaiah calls for a return to God, emphasizing that true fasting is to act justly and to release the oppressed. It highlights the holiness of God and humanity's need for redemption, stating that pagan practices separates people from God.

* Hope and Salvation: Amidst the warnings, the book offers a powerful message of hope. It promises that God will provide a way for people to be cleansed, forgiven, and restored.

* The Messiah: A central theme is the prophecy of a future Messiah who will bring about this salvation. This figure is described as both a suffering servant who will atone for sins and a future conquering king who will establish a kingdom of peace and righteousness.