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TriumphInTruthAdmin
TriumphInTruthAdmin    Triumph In Truth

2 yrs

Hanukkah is an eight day commemoration celebration of the re-dedication of the temple, after it had been desecrated by the wicked greek sovereign of Syria. Though the events leading up to the original Hanukkah were prophesied by Daniel, and Hanukkah is mention in John 10:22, it is not a feast of YAH described in Leviticus 23. However, the events of the original Hanukkah point to end time events and its important to understand the prophetic meaning of Hanukkah to be prepared for the perilous times ahead. 

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TriumphInTruthAdmin
TriumphInTruthAdmin    Triumph In Truth

2 yrs ·Youtube

Watch this informative Ministry Update video up on our YouTube channel to know what’s going on at Triumph In Truth Ministries. This short video is the intro to our new Home Worship Video Resource which you can watch now!

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Jay Carper
Jay Carper

2 yrs

As long as we are to call ourselves followers of Christ, let the Name be blasphemed in the observance, not the overstepping, of discipline, while we are being approved of God, not while we are being reproved. Oh blasphemy, bordering on martyrdom, which now proves me to be a Christian, while for that very account the world detests me! The cursing of well-maintained discipline is a blessing of the Name. As Paul said, "If I wished to please men, I should not be Christ's servant."
-Tertullian, On Idolatry, chapter 14

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Jay Carper
Jay Carper

2 yrs

Reuben was a terrible leader. In Genesis 42:37, he even offered to kill his own sons if he lost Benjamin in Egypt. What!?

In contrast, Judah offered his own life as security for Benjamin's, showing himself to be a transformed man, a true leader of his people. And when Jacob listened to Judah, acted in faith, and sent Benjamin to Egypt in v14, he didn't lose the two sons as he feared (Benjamin and Simeon), but gained one he thought already lost (Joseph).

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Eliyahu
Eliyahu

2 yrs

shalom:

• how many are ready for the total collapse of the financial system in late 2024-early 2025 scheduled in collusion with "COVID23"?

• how many are ready to help the stragglers who until recently have been nearly totally destroyed by the Freemasons and their legal system, plundered and violated until they have nearly nothing left but hands willing to plant and work?

i'd like to see how many #torahobservant folks are living a lifestyle fitting today's tragic call for endurance of things that out ancestors could never dream of and most of whom could not endure if they had their contemporary lifestyle and technology in today's world

Ready and willing! We have room to expand the garden too and some extra bunks in a barn, so long as folks will work
Ready but no room for extras, other folks are on their own!
Not ready but willing to get a community effort going pronto before the system collapses!
Not ready and not willing, leave me be!
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Eliyahu

if you are one such harmed, as i am (but i have learned how to force the system to comply, provided i get some miracles), then comment here that you need a place and let's get folks moved around before the highways get locked down and the cities become death camps
Covid23 was announced earlier this year and then planned in the Catastrophic Contagion meeting for next year. They plan on manufacturing some noncompliance and protests to justify their insurrection.
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Heather Mott

I feel like the options you provided are a little too specific for our situation- we are reasonably prepared and happy to take in others but, are not on a farm (or similarly sized property). Our situation (living in town) isn't ideal but, we have done what we can to prepare within that limitation.
Also, I do wish you would post information for your statement about the timeframe of things to come. I don't doubt you may be accurate but, I would like the opportunity for my husband and I to be able to look into it more and be able to remain current on updates from credible sources.
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RemnantResilience

No extra bunks, but ability to provide.
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Christine Miller
Christine Miller

2 yrs

THE LAW OF LOVE (an excerpt)

Genesis 6:13-9:17. Because God judged the sin and violence that had filled the earth with Noah’s Flood, He is accused of not being a God of love, but a vengeful, wrathful, judgmental, angry God. In fact, the emotion that God experienced over the violence that filled the earth, was sorrow (Gen 6:6), not anger. Another way to interpret that Hebrew verb, is that He was glad that man was mortal.

Why is God against sin? Sin hurts people. … That God is against sin, is an expression of His great heart of love which desires to shelter and protect the weak and vulnerable. To judge sin, to make an end of sin, is an act of love.

So He was glad that man was mortal, because death would eventually make an end of the hurt that one man was inflicting on another. But even in the Flood, the judgment for sin, God provided an ark for Noah and his family, a way to be preserved through the judgment that was coming on the earth. Noah was a preacher of righteousness (2 Pet 2:5). He spent 120 years building that boat, and while he was building, he preached to everyone around him. More people than Noah’s family were invited to go on that ark and be preserved through judgment! God wanted everyone who would walk through that open door to walk through it!

This is the Gospel of grace preached from Genesis. Jesus is our ark, and our open door (Joh 10:9, Rev 4:1), who will preserve through the judgment to come, all who are willing to enter into salvation through Him.

https://nothingnewpress.com/store/the-law-of-love/

#lawoflove #alittleperspective #nothingnewpress

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Nick Liebenberg
Nick Liebenberg    TTN Prayers and Bible Study.

2 yrs

SERIES B --- A CHOSEN PEOPLE --- LESSON 20

JOSEPH REVEALED

A DAY FOR TEARS

From Genesis 45:4-28

Joseph’s brothers stood there too shocked to answer him. The governor of all Egypt had just told them that he was their younger brother, whom they had sold as a slave. [Come close to me,] Joseph said to his brothers. Cautiously, they came closer to him. [I am your brother Joseph,] he said, [the one you sold as a slave into Egypt. But don’t worry or be afraid now for I know that YHVH sent me here to save your lives. The famine has been with us for two years now, but there are still five more years that will pass without ploughing or harvest. You must realize that I was sent here by YHVH, not you, so that you and your families may continue to live on the earth. YHVH has made me like a father to Pharaoh, lord of his household and ruler of all Egypt.] Then Joseph told them to go home with this message for his father, [Your son Joseph is alive and ruler of all Egypt, for YHVH has put him in charge of the land. I want you to come to Egypt and live in the land of Goshen so that you and your children and grandchildren can be near me. Bring also your flocks and herds. I will take care of you so that you and all that is yours will never lack any good thing, for there are five more years of famine.] Then Joseph said to Benjamin and his other brothers, [You are my witnesses that I am alive and talking to you and that I am promising these things. With five more years of famine, you will all live in poverty unless you come down here. You must tell my father of the wealth and power that I have in Egypt and what you have seen here. Now hurry and bring him to me.] Joseph took Benjamin into his arms and hugged him and cried upon his shoulder. Benjamin was so overcome with joy that he too, began to cry. Then Joseph embraced each brother, weeping as he did. At last, the brothers were able to talk to him again. It wasn’t long before Pharaoh heard the news about Joseph’s brothers. Pharaoh was pleased to hear that they had come and even his servants were pleased. [Tell your brothers to load up their donkeys and go back to Canaan for your father and all your families and bring them here to me. I will give you the best of Egypt and they will live with the best that we have to offer. Also tell your brothers to take some of our wagons for their wives and children and your father. They certainly shouldn’t be concerned about their property, for all of the land of Egypt is theirs.] Joseph gave his brothers wagons and provisions for the trip, as Pharaoh had commanded. He gave each brother a rich new robe, but he gave Benjamin five new robes and three hundred pieces of silver. He sent his father ten donkeys loaded with grain and good food from Egypt and ten female donkeys with grain, bread and other foods for his father to use on the trip to Egypt. As the brothers left, Joseph gave them one last warning, [Don’t quarrel on the way home!] So, the brothers left Egypt for Canaan. When they arrived, they could hardly wait to break the news to Jacob. [Joseph is alive! He is ruler of all the land of Egypt!] they said. It was too much to believe. Old Jacob’s heart sank when he heard this, for who could believe such a story? But he revived when he saw all the wagons and heard the words that Joseph had sent through his brothers. [My son Joseph is alive!] said Jacob. [I will go to Egypt and see him before I die.]

COMMENTARY

SOME FOREIGNERS IN ANCIENT EGYPT

It must have seemed to the brothers that their lives hung in the balance as they knelt before Egypt’s ruler. Then that ruler cried out, [I am Joseph!] Joseph had no desire for revenge. YHVH had used his brothers’ evil for good. YHVH had sent Joseph to Egypt to save them all. The ancient Egyptians considered the people from lands to the northeast of them to be crude, hairy, unsettled cultural inferiors. The men wore beards while the Egyptians were clean-shaven; they were nomads moving from place to place while the Egyptians settled in houses and cities; and they were primarily shepherds and keepers of livestock, while Egyptian life was rich and varied. But Egyptians did allow the Semites from the northeast into the country, if not very happily. One pharaoh built a line of forts along the frontier east of the Nile Delta. Nomads were checked in and out of the country there, in a kind of ancient customs system. The Egyptians not only found the Hebrews themselves inferior, they also thought their country very inconvenient. Instead of a river like the Nile to flood and water the land every year, rain fell from above and got people wet on its way down. The land in Egypt was flat and it was possible to see for miles in any direction, but in Canaan the mountains and trees blocked the view almost immediately. The ancient Egyptians found it so strange that their symbol for this foreign country and its people shows the hills of the land. The Old Testament contains many stories of people coming to Egypt. Joseph was not the first. Generations before Joseph, Abraham and Sarah travelled to Egypt to stay until the severe famine in Canaan was over. Sarah, who was beautiful, posed as Abraham’s sister during this period to protect him from the jealousy of the pharaoh. Abraham received many gifts from the pharaoh while Sarah lived as one of his wives. But plagues in the palace revealed the truth, and Abraham and Sarah were sent on their way. Many years later, during another famine in Canaan, Jacob sent Joseph’s brothers to Egypt to buy provisions. They met Joseph and did not know him. When they returned a second time, Joseph revealed his true identity to them. At the pharaoh’s personal invitation, Joseph brought Jacob, his entire family and all his possessions to Egypt. Many generations later, grown large in number, the descendants of this group would find themselves slaves under another and hostile pharaoh. The land of Egypt sometimes protected people who were victims of war or politics. During the reign of King David in Israel, the commander of the army waged a six-month campaign to destroy all the males in the neighbouring country of Edom. The Israelites and Edomites had been battling for years. Some members of the Edomite royal household escaped the massacre. They took Hadad, one of the young princes, and fled to Egypt. The pharaoh treated Hadad well and he prospered, later marrying the sister of the queen. Nevertheless, when he became a grown man, he returned to his native country to fight against Solomon, David’s successor. During Solomon’s reign the prophet Ahijah told an Israelite man named Jeroboam that he would become king over ten of the twelve tribes of Israel. Solomon wanted his son to be ruler over all of Israel, and his fury when he heard this news forced Jeroboam to go to Egypt to save his life. But some years after Solomon’s death, Jeroboam did become king of the ten northern Israelite tribes. Egypt was also briefly home for the prophet Jeremiah. When the Babylonians captured Israel and made it part of their empire, some Jewish leaders escaped captivity. Ishmael, one of these men, assassinated the Babylonian ruler of Israel and massacred his followers. The other Jewish leaders tried to stop him, and Ishmael escaped and went into hiding. The innocent Israelites, afraid of the Babylonians’ revenge, asked the prophet Jeremiah what they should do. He told them to remain in Israel, where their special blessing and protection would help them survive. But the faith of the people was weak and their fear was very strong. They did not believe Jeremiah. Instead, they left for Egypt where they would be safe, forcing Jeremiah to come with them. Jeremiah died there, and the descendants of these doubting refugees met their death as well when the Babylonians later conquered Egypt.

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Jay Carper
Jay Carper

2 yrs

Silver symbolizes blood in Scripture. When Joseph put his brothers' silver back in their sacks, he alluded to the silver they received when they sold him into slavery, and also reminded them that they now held Simeon's blood in their hands.
#genesis 42:25-28 #miketz

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Bridget Arlig
Bridget Arlig

2 yrs

What kind of menorah do you use for Hanukkah?

You can add a comment about your reasons and significance as well. I’m personally looking into this and hoping not to cause any upset.

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Chris215

I personally use the seven cup Menorah for a few reasons. The seven cup configuration of a Menorah is the original design by the Creator. This original seven cup design was the configuration at the time of the Hanukkah story, which was only a seven cup oil lamp. The seven cup oil lamp is called a Menorah ( Hebrew for lamp) while a nine cup is actually called a Hanukiah which is a type of candelabra for candles. The reason for the nine Candles is from the Talmud and the legend of the oil lasting eight days instead of one. The nine candle candelabra did not show up until several decades or maybe centuries after the Hanukkah story. These are some of the reasons of why I personally only use a seven cup Menorah. Each person will have to do His or Her research and come to their own conclusion. Shalom and best regards from your brother.
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Bridget Arlig

I accidentally voted on this ?
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Teresa Smith
Teresa Smith  shared a  post

2 yrs

Jonathan Lankford
Jonathan Lankford      Aviv Sites
2 yrs

#hanukkah (חֲנֻכָּה‎ dedication) Day 1 Quote: "[The king commanded] that they profane the sabbaths and festival days, and pollute the sanctuary... Set up altars... and sacrifice swine’s flesh... That they should also leave their children uncircumcised... that they might forget the Torah" (1 Maccabees 1:45b-49).

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