Category Archive for "Section III. The Descendants of Anak: Bloodlines and Covenants"

Chapter 23: The Rephaites And Amorites

Unger’s defines the Emites or Emin as “giant aborigines who occupied the land east of the Jordan River and who were dispossessed by the Moabites.” 52 The name Emin was derived from the fear they inspired because of their sinfulness and size. 53 The Zamzummites were defined as “noisemakers,” likely from the thunderous bellows of their voices that Atlanteans and Titans were well- known for and/or those that mumbled and/or those who murmured. The Ammonites destroyed them. 54 The word…

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Chapter 24: Sodom And Gomorrah

When we consider that Jude 1:6 connects sexual perversion of Sodom with sexual perversion of angels and we know that Nephilim were in the Sodom region at that time, the connection becomes firmly cemented with circumstantial evidence. From the Gnostic perspective, Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed by the God of the Bible not for their wickedness but because of their wisdom and insights. 14 This again testifies to Nephilim contamination, for the Gnostics believe the God of the Bible is…

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Chapter 25: The Amalekites

The book of 1 Samuel notes the people identified as Amalekites lived in Shur, or Seir, since the ancient times; translation: before the flood. Ancient times do not refer to the time of Abraham. The terms “ancient times, old, old, former times, long ago” and “before our time” were always understood as the pre- flood epoch. This understanding is underscored in its application in Sirach, Baruch, Wisdom, Deuteronomy, Psalms, Proverbs, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezra, Daniel, 1 Peter, and 2 Peter, where…

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Chapter 26: Jethro And Caleb

Pharaoh did not welcome the pre- Exodus advice provided by Jethro about the growing Israelite problem, banning the priest Jethro- Reuel in disgrace to Midia, 26 which was ample motive for Jethro to have helped Moses prepare for his return to Egypt. All of this only leads us to speculate as to just who Jethro actually was, particularly when we consider that Judges 1:16 and 4:11 note that Moses’ father- in- law (Jethro/Reuel) was a Kenite and not a Midianite…

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Chapter 27: Nimrod

Nimrod’s empire extended to the land of Accad, between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, where the two rivers run closely together. The latter dynasty of Accad was believed founded, but more than likely inherited Accad and three other cities were the beginning of Nimrod’s post- Babel empire. 15 The empire, by Sargon the Great around the twenty- third to the twenty- fourth century B.C.E, when his men overran the Sumerian homeland. 16 Sargon was the first to conquer and then turn the…

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Chapter 28: The People Of The Plain

According to Josephus, Nimrod was a great leader of the people of Shinar after the flood. 1 Laurence Gardner states the word Shinar resonates with a strong sense of antediluvian déjà vu, for “Shinar” was an (little understood) alternative name for Sumer. 2 One begins to wonder whether or not the desire of Nimrod and his people was to only migrate away from Noah, as a first bold step in recolonizing the planet. Was there was an unexplained, early schism…

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Chapter 29: The Tower At Babel

It is likely Nimrod must have been sympathetic to the Nephilim and their followers, when one considers the kind of government Nimrod imposed (like that of Gibborim and Nephilim), alongside the mystical, pagan religion of Hermes, which Nimrod further imposed on the people of Shinar. I, therefore, conclude that Nimrod was lamenting over his fallen, idolized demigods and the descendants of Cain, not his own ancestry dating back to Seth. The new doctrines included the promises of renewed enlightenment, the…

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Chapter 30: The Original Great White Brotherhood

Craft legends recorded Nimrod was a Mason who “loved” the (spurious) sciences. 2 Nimrod was captivated with aggression stemming from his newly found power. He is celebrated as a great Mason, 3 who applied his trade as he pleased. Not only was Nimrod a great Mason, but also he was the Grand Master, 4 the leader of the new cult. Nimrod, in fact, was the first Masonic Grand Master for the postdiluvian world. 5 He was the Grand Master who…

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Chapter 31: Forging The Nation of Destiny

Within the Exodus miracle rest obscure keys to unlocking little- understood Nephilim bloodlines and the mystery of the apparent barbaric slaughter of unsuspecting nations. The land of milk and honey promised to Moses by God was comprised of hostile Canaanites, Hittites, Amorites, Perizzites, Hivites, and the Jebusites, 1 all who were infested with Nephilim. Historians and theologians always seemingly overlook or dismiss the Nephilim presence when they examine this staggering turning point of history. Further secular historians dismiss the Exodus…

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Chapter 32: The Nephilim Wars

Amorites strategically controlled all the essential mountain roads branching from the spine that ran down the center of the mountain range. This then positioned the Amorites, who lived west of the Jordan in Samaria (Ephraim), known today as Syria, and in northern Judah. The other descending sons/nations of Canaan, as well as the Hittites, were living in the northern and northwestern regions, towards the Mediterranean, while the Girgashites and the Perziites resided to the south and to the east, which…

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