Minding My Own Business – Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series – Part 9)

In Part 9 of the Open Door Series "Minding My Own Business", Nehemia Gordon speaks about how he was minding his own business in academia when the Creator of the universe had other plans.

Transcript

Minding My Own Business – Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series – Part 9)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Nehemia: A little over 10 years ago, I was sitting up in the ivory tower, quite literally the ivory tower, at the Hebrew University. And they talk about the ivory towers of the university. We actually have an ivory tower at Hebrew U, and they even have the symbol of the ivory tower on the ivory tower. That’s how pompous they are at Hebrew U.

I was sitting there, minding my own business, and I was on an academic track. My plan in life was to finish my master’s degree and then go on and do a Doctorate in Biblical Studies. And the last thing I expected is that I would be standing here in front of a group of Christians and Messianics, and having little children come up and recite a Hebrew version of the Lord’s Prayer. I never expected that, never planned on that. That was beneath me. That was for the masses. I was going to be a professor. I wasn’t going to deal with simple people. [laughter]

And something happened. The God of the universe, I believe, had different plans than what I had. One day, I’m minding my own business there, and I get a call asking me to come and meet some minister from America who was a chaplain for the Vikings, or something like that, something to do with football players. I didn’t really care about that. As I was studying for my master’s degree, I had a little side job where I was doing research. I actually worked on this book, among others, the Dead Sea Scrolls Reader, and one of my jobs there was to check the texts that they were translated correctly, and then translate other texts that had never been translated in the Dead Sea Scrolls, and I worked on a few other things.

One of the side things that I did is I gave tours to VIPs that would come over to Israel from the US, because I had studied Biblical Studies and Archaeology for my bachelor’s degree, and my master’s was in Biblical Studies. So it was second nature to me to take people around ancient biblical sites, and I loved it. I love the land of Israel, and the sites of Israel. And so I would take people around the sites, just to make a little bit of extra money. They asked me to take around this chaplain, this minister, and I’m like, “All right, sure.” And they want me to come and have dinner beforehand at the Mount Zion Hotel. So I go and I meet these guys at the Mount Zion Hotel, and everybody’s sitting around and they’re telling their stories.

And then, this pastor, this Methodist pastor starts to tell his story. And he starts off the story about how he had a dream. And my response, of course, was to try very hard not to roll my eyes. [laughter] “Here’s the Christian, come to Israel and he’s had this spiritual experience.” And I’ve seen this a million times, and I’m not impressed with it. It’s certainly not something that I, as an academic, would deal with. That’s for the simple people.

And he starts to tell me how he had a dream, and in the dream… the gist of the dream is that he’s supposed to come to Israel, to Jerusalem, for Shavuot. And that caught my attention when he said, “Jerusalem for Shavuot”. I didn’t let on at the time, but it did catch my attention. And the reason it caught my attention is that there’s something special about coming to Jerusalem, of all places, for Shavuot, because in the Torah there are three pilgrimage feasts, three chagim, say, “Chagim.”

Audience: Chagim.

Nehemia: Chagim, chag is a pilgrimage feast. It’s where you come up to the place of the Temple three times a year. It says, “All males shall appear before Me,” in the Torah, in a number of places. And so, he having a dream, telling him to come to Jerusalem for Shavuot, I said, “Well, that’s interesting. But then again, he’s a Christian pastor, a Methodist. God doesn’t speak to those people.” [laughter] This is certainly the paradigm that I was raised with - that there is a person who’s unkosher, and I’m not going to be dealing with somebody like that. And certainly, God isn’t going to.

And he tells me this story about how he had the dream telling him to come to Israel for Shavuot, to Jerusalem. Then the next part of the story made absolutely no sense to me, I thought it was completely ridiculous. He tells me how he was called by God to get a Torah scroll. Now, Torah scrolls cost tens of thousands of dollars. And so I hear him say that he got a Torah scroll, and he tells me this story, how he goes to a West Bank settlement, so-called West Bank settlement, a peaceful little Jewish town in what they call the West Bank. [laughter] You’re laughing, but if you go to what they call the West Bank settlements, they’re peaceful little Jewish towns, suburbia.

So he gets this Torah scroll and he tells me this story how they give him the Torah scroll and he doesn’t pay any money for it. They say, “You can pay for it later.” And I have this picture in my head of what happened. I know exactly what happened. He got one of these cute little toy Torah scrolls that they sell for like $10, maybe $30 if it’s very fancy, printed on the bottom of… what do you call those things, the sticks of the Torah scroll it says, “Made in China”. [laughter] No, I’m serious. And I think this thing is printed on white paper, and it’s very cheap, and that must be what they gave him. And that’s why they said, “You don’t have to pay for it now, you’ll pay for it later,” because they think he’s a frier. Frier is a very important Israeli concept, say, “Frier”.

Audience: Frier.

Nehemia:Frier” translates roughly as a sucker. [laughter] So I’m sure this guy is a frier, and he convinces me to go over and see his Torah scroll, his little toy, cute thing that he’s dancing around with, I think. And I go and I walk in, and this is what I see. And I look at this thing, and I can see already, because the cover is laying on top of it, so I can see at the sides, peeking out from behind the cover, that this is actual parchment. And I realize, “This is not a little toy made in China Torah scroll. This is the real deal.”

And what I see on the front cover really impresses me. It says here, it’s a verse from Isaiah chapter 2. And it’s a verse that talks about people from all the nations flowing to Jerusalem, the word is “naharu”, which means “they’ll flow like a river” to Jerusalem. And then it explains here why they flow to Jerusalem. It says, “Ki miTzion tetzeh Torah u’dvar Yehovah miYerushalayim”. “For the Torah shall go forth from Zion, and the word of Yehovah from Jerusalem.” And so he’s come to Jerusalem to get a Torah scroll, and it says the verse, that his actions are a fulfilment of. I mean, his actions are a fulfilment of this prophesy, and the prophesy is on the Torah scroll.

Well, then I open up the Torah scroll, I unroll it, and what do I read? And I’m not even thinking about what I’m reading, I’m just reading the Hebrew. And I start reading, and he asks me, “What are you reading?” And it turns out that this is the section in Leviticus 23 on Shavuot, on the Feast of Weeks. Now, you have to understand, this is 10 years ago, when I’m sitting in the ivory tower, minding my own business. So this guy over there, Keith Johnson, he is, “woo-hoo!” He’s like dancing around, and he’s bouncing off the walls. And I’m like, “That’s very interesting. Maybe it’s a coincidence”. [laughter] But at the same time, deep down, I started to wonder, “What is going on? What’s God doing here, what’s going on? This guy comes to Jerusalem, he gets the Torah scroll. What is happening here?”

And let’s look at this prophesy in Isaiah, and you’ll see why I was having these questions. Isaiah chapter 2 verse 2, it says, “It shall come to pass at the end of days, that the Temple Mount shall be established above the mountains, and shall be lifted above hills. And all the nations shall flow to it, they’ll come like a river.” Then in verse 3 it says, “And many nations shall go saying, ‘Let us go up to the mountain of Yehovah, to the house of the God of Jacob. And he will teach us.’” And that word, “teach us” is really two words, “yore-nu”, say, “Yore”.

Audience: Yore.

Nehemia: Nu.

Audience: Nu.

Nehemia: “Nu” means “us”. “Yore” is, “He will teach”. But it’s also the root of the word “Torah”, so “Yorenu” is, “He will teach us Torah”. So this is what the nations are saying, “He will teach us Torah from His ways, and we will walk in His paths, for the Torah shall go forth from Zion,” that’s the words that were on the Torah scroll, “and the word of Yehovah from Jerusalem.”

So I’m reading this and I’m saying, “Wait a minute. It’s talking about the nations coming and getting the Torah,” and that wasn’t the way I had understood things. I was raised up in the Rabbinical tradition, and we were taught that the Torah is for the Jews, for the remnant of the people of Israel, the Jewish people. And the Gentiles… it’s not really for them. And we didn’t talk about things like salvation, or not salvation. We just said, “This is for us, it’s this treasure we have. We’re not going to share it. This is our gold. Stay away.” [laughter]

And then I read this verse, and I’m looking at a fulfilment of this verse - a man who has fulfilled this verse through his actions, and I’m thinking, “Wait a minute. Maybe this word of God is for this man.” But back then, the reason I struggled with this is that I’m what’s called a Litvak Jew. Say, “Litvak”.

Audience: Litvak.

Nehemia: Litvaks are Jews who came from Eastern Europe, from Lithuania. Litvak is the Yiddish pronunciation of someone who comes from Lithuania. And the Litvak Jews, the Jews of Lithuania, they were the intellectual elite of the Jewish world, up until the Holocaust. And if you have any question about it, just ask the Litvak rabbi and he’ll tell you that it’s true, [laughter] that in fact, they, to this day, are considered the intellectual elite. And as the intellectual elite, one of the things that I was taught is that we don’t deal with anything that’s too spiritual, or dreams, or miracles or things like that. That’s for the simple people. You could see why I fit in so well at the university. It was the same attitude, that we have this knowledge, we have this information, so we don’t need any of that inspiration. And that’s why I think I had so much trouble accepting that somebody like Keith Johnson was having this miracle happen to him, and why I came up with every explanation except for that this was a miracle of God, because I was thinking, “No, that doesn’t happen to Methodist pastors. That’s not how God works. And in today’s age, we don’t really have miracles anyway. When the Messiah comes, He’ll re-establish all of that. That was for the ancient times and for the future, but here in the middle, we just have the information to keep us company.”

And here, there’s actually a verse in Scripture that talks about this, that quotes the Litvak Jews. Did you know that? That the Litvak Jews appear in the Bible? Now, the prophesy in Isaiah chapter 2 verses 2 to 4 appears almost word for word in Micah 4, 2 through 4. But then Micah adds the response of the people of his day. And the people of his day, they were Litvaks. And here’s what they said. They said, “Surely, all the nations shall walk, each in the name of his god. But we will walk in the name of Yehovah, our God, for ever and ever.” And what they were saying, what they were responding to this prophesy of all the nations flowing to Jerusalem to be taught the word of God is, “No, those Gentiles, they have no part in this. They can’t be part of this. We don’t want to share this with them. This is our golden treasure. We don’t want them to have any part of it. They can have their gods. I don’t even know what the Methodist god is, they can have it. But that’s got nothing to do with our God of Israel.” And that was, to some extent, the way I looked at it.

And what happened is, I met more and more people that shook the foundations of this conception that I had, of this concept that I had. Here is one of the places that shook the foundations of that misconception that I had. This is a place called the Shrine of the Book. I like to call this place, the Jot and Tittle Museum. And the reason I call it the Jot and Tittle Museum is that in this place - this is part of the Israel Museum - they have two things on display. One is the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the other is what’s called the Aleppo Codex, which is called the Crown Jewel of Hebrew Manuscripts. They call it the “Keter haram tzovah”, the Aleppo Crown, because it’s considered the ultimate Hebrew manuscript that preserves the minute points of Scripture. And, you know, 2,000 years ago there was a man who talked about “not one jot or one tittle passing away from the Torah”. Do you know who said that?

Audience: Yes.

Nehemia: And the place where these jots and tittles are preserved is in this museum, the Jot and Tittle Museum. And one of my dreams in life was to get into the museum and be able to see this. This is the Aleppo Codex, as I said, the crown jewel. Now, anybody can walk in and see what you see in this photograph here. But what they don’t know, and I what I learned at the university, is that in fact, only the top two pages are real. The rest of the pages, the ones on the side, those are preserved in a secret vault that I’m not allowed to tell you where it is. But they’re preserved in a secret vault, and the reason for that is that they’re afraid, this being the Middle East – not here, but where the Jot and Tittle Museum is located – being the Middle East, they’re afraid someone will walk in and blow it up. And it’s too important, it’s irreplaceable. So what they’ve done is taken the top two pages, and everything here on the side, that is what I call a fake. Keith doesn’t like me calling it a fake. He prefers me referring to it as a replica.

So everything here on the side is a replica, only these top two pages are real, and the rest of it is in the vault. And so one of my dreams in life, one of my aspirations, studying at the university, was to get into the vault and see the original. And that’s because, as I mentioned, although I was born and raised in Illinois, deep down in my heart I’m from Missouri, and I need to see it for myself. And if you go and you take any Bible in the world, any translation of the Old Testament, of the Tanakh, into English, it’s based on this manuscript, on the Aleppo Codex. And when I have any Hebrew printing, you know, I have a dozen different Hebrew printings of the Old Testament, of the Tanakh, in my house, every one of them goes back to the Aleppo Codex.

So me, being from Missouri in my heart, I needed to get into that vault and see the original for myself. And this was a dream that I thought would never happen. I thought, “How am I ever going to get in there?” They don’t let people in there, it’s not on display. They’re too afraid that someone will blow it up or damage it.

Well, one day, this Methodist pastor, Keith Johnson calls me up, after I had met him about a year earlier, and he tells me over the phone, he says, “I have this important guest who wants to come to Israel. He wants to have a similar experience to what I had, and his name is Reggie White.” And I say, “Who’s that?” He’s some football player who won the Superbowl, or something like that. And so I look him up online. Okay, it sounds very impressive, but I’ve never watched a Superbowl in my life. I’m not into sports.

And I say, “Okay, I’ll take him on a tour.” And I take him around the country, and he actually stays with Michael, and we had some interactions there. But I end up taking him to see two things. That was the main part of his visit, he wanted to see two things. One is, he wanted to go and see the Hebrew manuscripts of Matthew. That was one of the things that we did that day, and that was no problem whatsoever. Anybody can go in and see those if you know what to look for.

The second thing was a little bit more of a challenge. The second thing he wanted to see - he had been studying Scripture, and he also had been looking for the sources. He had been preaching for years in his off-season. They used to call him the Minister of Defense. And as the Minister of Defense, he was preaching this standard, out-of-the-box messages that he was told to preach.

When he retired from football, he told me that he wanted to become as great a minister, a preacher, as he had been a football player. And he didn’t become such a great football player by accident. A lot of it had to do with just born talent, but it also had to do with determination and working hard. And he said, “I’m going to work as hard at becoming a minister, as a preacher, as I was a football player.” And he started to read the Bible. And what he was looking for is the source of all those sermons he had been preaching over the years, and he couldn’t find them. And then he thought, “Well, maybe if I go back to the original language, I’ll find them.” And so he started to actually study Hebrew. One of the things he had heard about from Keith, who let it out of the bag, was about this Aleppo Codex, and specifically, that the one on display isn’t the real one.

So Reggie, I speak with him on the phone, and he says in this deep voice he has - and Keith can do his voice so much better - but he says in this deep voice that he wants us to see the original Aleppo Codex, not the replica on display, but the one in the vault. And so, all right, what do I do? I call up the people at the Jot and Tittle Museum, and I say to them, “Can we get into the vault?” And I do what they call the PR thing. I say, “There’s this famous football player…” who I’ve never heard of, “coming from America, and he wants to see the original Aleppo Codex.” And they say to me, “No problem, it’s on display at the Shrine of the Book. Anybody can come in and see it.” And I say to them, “No, not the replica. He wants to see the one in the vault.” Then there’s silence on the other end of the phone. And the guy’s thinking, “How does he know about this? It’s a secret.”

Well, the guy says, “No way. No go.” He said, “Ariel Sharon,” who was the prime minister at the time, “couldn’t get in here to see it. It’s not for tourists. This isn’t a joke. This isn’t a game. We don’t let people in to see it. It’s a national treasure that’s not available for people, for the general public.” And I said, “Okay, I did the best I could,” and I hung up the phone. I tried. All you could do is the best you can.

About an hour later, I get a call from that guy’s boss. And it turns out that one of his big donors is a huge football fan. And he says, “Not only can you come in to see the vault, but I’ll take you there personally to show it to you.” And this is how I ended up in the vault, seeing the original Aleppo Codex. This is me, about 80 pounds ago, and this is Reggie, of blessed memory, and here’s the original Aleppo Codex. The guy’s got the white gloves, he can’t touch it directly because the acid on his hand will damage the paper, the parchment. It needs to last another 1,000, or 2,000 years.

And this was one of the high points of my life - getting in to see this Aleppo Codex in the vault. You probably can’t see the excitement on my Litvak face, but it’s there. [laughter] But you know, Reggie and Keith and others like them coming to Israel and interacting with them made me start to think, “What is going on here?” My conception was what it said in Micah, “We’ve got our God, they’ve got their god. Never the twain shall meet. You’ve got no part with us.” And as I’m interacting with more and more people and I’m seeing their love for the word of God, and they have the same love for the word of God that I have, I’m thinking, “Something’s happening here.” Let me share a little bit about my past that opened me up to this.

Does anybody know what this is, if you show the slide? What is that? What does that represent? Can somebody tell me?

Woman: It’s a Star of David.

Nehemia: Yeah, we know it’s the Star of David on a chain, you’re not blind, okay. But what’s the significance of that? And if you don’t know, then you’re not a Jew who grew up in the 1980s. When I was growing up, this was the symbol of the day. Every synagogue had this emblazoned on the front of the synagogue. And this was the symbol, it was part of something called Operation Exodus, which was a program to free the Jews of the Soviet Union. There were millions of Jews behind the Iron Curtain who were being suppressed, who could not express their Judaism, who were being arrested if they went to the synagogue, who were being taught that there’s no God, that the world exists through random happenstance, and if they believed differently, they’ll end up in a gulag in Siberia.

So this was the big thing of my childhood. I used to go to protests to free the Soviet Jews. What happened in 1990 is the Soviet Union fell, and there began this huge flood of Jews, this influx of Jews, 1.1 million Jews came out of the Soviet Union between 1990 and 2000.

And okay, wow, that’s so amazing. But you have to understand, when I was growing up in the ‘80s, this was something that we dreamed of when the Messiah comes, the Jews will be free. And it’s something that’s been fulfilled in my lifetime. I mean, even a Litvak can’t look at that and say that God doesn’t do miracles in this time, in this era. That was a miracle of Biblical proportion. [applause]

And then, about a year later, this happened, or about the same time, actually… can we see this slide here? This was the Jews of Ethiopia who had been there in exile for 2,000 years, living in mud huts and villages without electricity. And I remember, back then it was May of 1991, and I was in my year just after high school, and I went to Israel, not to move, I mean, I didn’t immigrate there, but I went there just for one year to volunteer on a kibbutz. And part of my lifelong dream before I went to university was to be a dirt farmer. The reason I wanted to be a dirt farmer is, I read in the Bible about my ancestors, the Israelites, who were farmers, and I said, “Okay, I want to be a farmer.” And of course, my thinking, growing up as a city slicker in Chicago is, “You don’t need to go to university to be a farmer. Even though everybody in my family went to college, I’m going to be the first one not to go to college, because what do I need to go to college for to be a farmer?”

Little did I know that Israel has some of the highest tech agriculture in the world. But anyway, that year, I was a dirt farmer, and I worked the fields. I literally got up at 4:30 in the morning, drove out in a tractor into the fields, and most of what I did had to do with irrigation technologies. And one day, I’m standing there alone in this field and I see a mobile home driving by, on the highway. And I’m like, “That’s a strange thing.” You might see that in Texas, and New Mexico, [laughter] but that’s a very uncommon, a double-wide trailer coming by in the back of a truck in northern Israel, you don’t see that. And then, a few minutes later, there was another one, and another one, and then there was a whole line of these trailers coming by. And I heard on the news that night that… there was a communist regime in Ethiopia that would not let the Jews leave, and the regime fell, and the people of Israel didn’t know if that vacuum that was created by the fall of the government would last three days or three minutes. And they sent over hundreds of planes to get the Jews out of Ethiopia, and they brought out tens of thousands of Jews. And what I was seeing, the line of the double-wide trailers was where they were going to settle them that day. And that is a miracle of Biblical proportions. [applause]

And this is actually a miracle foretold in the Book of Jeremiah, literally. It says, “’The days are coming,’ says Yehovah, ‘that it shall no longer be said: As Yehovah lives, who brought up the children of Israel from the land of Egypt.’” That’s how they used to make vows. They would say, “I swear as Yehovah, who brought Israel up out of the land of Egypt, lives.” That was their vows. He said, “No longer will they say that. But rather, as Yehovah lives, who brought up the children from the land of the north…” Someone say, “Soviet Union”.

Audience: Soviet Union.

Nehemia: “…and from all the lands where He had driven them, for I will bring them back into their land which I gave them to their fathers.” We’ve literally seen the fulfilment of this prophesy from thousands of years ago. You know, when Jeremiah said this 2,600 years ago, people must have thought he was insane. The Babylonians are battering down the gates of Jerusalem, and he’s talking about the return of the exiles? And then, later on they were in shackles, being taken away as captives to Babylon. And he’s talking about how those captives will return. That must have seemed like a fantasy. They must have thought he was crazy.

But in our lifetimes - well, not for you young people – but in our lifetimes, this has been fulfilled, literally. And as I was seeing these things, I began to think, “Here’s another prophesy, Isaiah 14:1.” It says, “When Yehovah has mercy upon Jacob and once again chooses Israel, placing them in their land, the strangers shall join themselves to them and shall be added to the house of Jacob”. Woo! [applause]

Now, here’s the really exciting thing. The phrase, “Shall join themselves,” those three words, “Shall join themselves,” in Hebrew, “shall join” actually is one word, “venilvah”. Now, “venilvah” is from the same root as the word Levite. And if you look at the story of how Levi, the son of Leah, got his name, she talks about joining herself to her husband. So what it’s saying here is that the strangers shall “Levite themselves”, be added to the house of Jacob. Now, this is a Biblical prophesy that I think I’m increasingly seeing around the world being fulfilled. I’m seeing people like the Methodist pastor and the football player and people who I would never think have any portion with the house of Jacob, with my people, they’re coming and they’re telling me, they love the Torah. [applause]

I once asked Keith how he got drawn to the Torah. And he usually doesn’t share this story, because maybe it’s not very sexy. But the story he tells, the story he told me, is that he saw a Torah scroll, and when he went to touch it he broke into tears. And what brought him to the Torah is he couldn’t understand why he broke into tears. What was it? There was something there. And I believe it was the God of Israel drawing him in. You know, we read in Isaiah 56 about how God gathers the dispersed of Israel, and it says in verse 8, “I will gather others unto those who I have gathered”. And I believe people like Keith and Reggie and many others around the world on every continent – and I mean, literally on every continent, including Antarctica, because I met a guy from Antarctica, and I saw it’s true – are being drawn to the God of Israel. And they can’t explain why. You know, they shake the family tree, waiting for a Jew to fall out, [laughter] and nothing falls out. There’s no one in their heritage that they can find that’s Jewish. And you know what? I don’t think you have to invent a Jewish ancestor, because God is drawing people. He’s gathering people. And if you feel that feeling in your heart - unless you had bad pizza last night, and that’s heartburn - then that is the God of Israel drawing you into His covenant, gathering you, just as He gathered those people out of Russia, and gathered those people out of Ethiopia. And there are stories of this ingathering that are unbelievable.

You know, when they went to get the Jews of Yemen, they sent these airplanes, and the people had never seen airplanes. I mean, literally, they’d never seen airplanes. These were people who were living in the 12th century. I think the people left behind in Yemen are still living in the 12th century. But these were people who technologically were living literally in the 12th century. That was the level of technology they had. They’d never seen airplanes, so they told the people, “We’re going to take you to the Land of Israel on magic carpets.” That’s what they said, and they actually called it, Operation Magic Carpet, because the people didn’t understand, “You’re going to take us, and you’re going to fly us thousands of miles to the land that we read about in the Bible, to the land of our ancestors? That’s not possible. We have to go on camels, and stop every day to get water.” And they told them, “No, we’re going to take you on magic carpets. Come and you’ll see.” And that was back in the ‘50s, and this is an ongoing process of the people being drawn back to the land. This is a fulfilment of prophesy, not in some metaphorical, symbolic sense, but literally, these things are being fulfilled.

In Zechariah 8:23, Keith brought this over Shavuot in Dallas. “Thus says Yehovah of hosts, ‘In those days, 10 men of all the languages of the nations shall grab hold of the corner of a garment of a Jewish man saying, Let us go with you, for we have heard that God is with you.’” Now, Keith brought this verse over Shavuot, and talked about how there was an opportunity to grab hold of my suit jacket here. Now, a couple of the people watching online, somebody say, “morons”. [laughter]

A couple of people, most people got it, but there were a few people watching online who saw this and said, “Oh, Keith is proclaiming Nehemia to be the Messiah.” Morons. [laughter] No, seriously. Let me share with you a little technical detail, put the inspiration aside and talk information. There’s something in Hebrew called the collective singular, say, “collective singular”.

Audience: Collective singular.

Nehemia: Collective singular is this concept, it’s actually in all Semitic languages, but in Hebrew, as well. And the idea of the collective singular is, if you want to refer to an entire category, you refer to the one. And so for example, when God created the birds, it says, literally in Hebrew, “And God created bird”. Now, in English, it translates it as “birds”, because English doesn’t have a collective singular, but Hebrew does. So when you see that singular, it’s the category of bird.

And I love this example, it’s an example in Exodus where it talks about how God, through Moses, brings the plague of the frogs. And it said, “And a frog ascended over Egypt”. And actually, the rabbis, I think half-jokingly, say that there was a giant frog [laughter] and then it split up into millions of tiny frogs. No, but really, that’s an example of the collective singular, and it means the category of frogs came over Egypt, not a singular frog. And when it says, “The Jewish man” there, it doesn’t mean a specific Jewish man named Nehemia Gordon, or Bill Rabinowitz. It means the category of the Jew, and not literally, 10 Gentiles, but that 10 different languages, meaning many different languages, the category of Gentiles. That’s what it’s talking about. And what it’s talking about is the joining of the Gentile and the Jew saying, “Let’s go together to the God of Israel, and understand this God of Israel, and look in the oracles of God and see what He has for us to say, what He has for us to do, what He’s telling us to live by.” That’s what I think it’s about.

Zephaniah 3:9 is one of my favorite verses. It says, “For then I will restore to the peoples a pure language.” Say, “pure language”.

Audience: Pure language.

Nehemia: “…that they may all call upon the name of Yehovah to serve Him with one accord.” What is that pure language?

Audience: Hebrew.

Nehemia: How do you know it’s Hebrew? Look, I’m the Litvak. You can’t just tell me, “Oh, well. I feel in my heart, spiritually it’s Hebrew.” You could say that if you want, but I don’t buy it. I need solid evidence, proof. That’s what being a Litvak is about. Show me. The people from Missouri, they’re Litvaks.

So how do I know that the original language, the pure language, is the original language, Hebrew? Well, Genesis 11:1 says, “And the whole earth was one language.” And I know that’s Hebrew, not because I just feel it deep in my heart - I can prove to you from Scripture. My book, The Hebrew Yeshua vs the Greek Jesus talks about this a little bit. Actually, I don’t think it does, but it’s a good book, anyway. [laughter]

Oh, I know why I brought that; because I have examples there of Hebrew word puns that show you that the name Adam and the name Eve, that those only make sense in Hebrew when you hear the explanation for the name. Remember, “Yeshua” and “Yoshia” from before? That that only made sense in Hebrew? Same thing with Adam and Eve, and so I’ve brought other examples here. Their son, Cain, in Hebrew is “Kayin”, say, “Kayin”.

Audience: Kayin.

Nehemia: And why is he called “Kayin?” Because Eve said, “I created a man with Yehovah,” that’s what it literally says in Hebrew. And the word for “I created”, those two words is “kaniti”. Say, “kaniti”.

Audience: Kaniti.

Nehemia: So he’s called “Kayin” because she said, “kaniti”, “I created”. Okay, that’s the name “Kayin”. It may coincidentally work in some language like, I don’t know, Tagalog, but if you look at all of the examples, they only work collectively in Hebrew.

Let’s look at another example. And why am I bringing this? This is before God mixed up the languages, when there was one single language. So what language was that? It had to be Hebrew. Seth, the second son third, or the third son, is in Hebrew, “Shet”. Say, “Shet”.

Audience: Shet.

Nehemia: And why is he called “Shet?” Because his mother says, “For God appointed for me another descendant.” And the word “appointed” is “sha’at”, “He appointed”. Say, “sha’at”.

Audience: Sha’at.

Nehemia: So why is he called “Shet?” Because sha’at, “God appointed for me”. All of these examples only work in Hebrew. Here’s another one, “Hevel”. The name, Hevel, it doesn’t say he’s called Hevel for this reason, but it’s obvious when you read the story. The name Hevel means “vanity, emptiness”. And why is he called that? Because he had no continuation.

Nimrod is my favorite example. His name means “let us rebel”. Why do you think Nimrod was called that? Maybe because we pronounce the… well anyway, his name is actually “Nimrohd”, and if you pronounce it “Nimrod”, that’s kind of a nimrod thing to do. [laughter] But “Nimrohd” was called that because… why? Because apparently, at the Tower of Babel he said, “Hey, let’s rebel against God, the Creator of the universe. Let’s build a tower and go up to heaven.” And at that point, God said, “Okay, enough of Hebrew being for everybody. I’m going to mix up the languages now.”

And the prophesy of Zephaniah 3:9 is that the curse of Babel will be undone, and in the end times, all mankind will revert to having one language. And not only that, but they’ll have that language so they can call upon Him… Oh, I’ve got to bring this. They can call upon Him with one accord. The noble donkey, isn’t he cute? Now, why do I bring this picture? You know, this prophesy of all mankind having one language… in order for that to be fulfilled, we’ve got to start off with, I think, the people of Israel speaking that language, and that’s something that we take for granted today.

There are millions of people around the world today that Hebrew is their native tongue, but that was not always the case. Go back to before 1880, and there wasn’t a single human being that spoke Hebrew as their native language, not a single person on earth. And there was a man with a dream named Eliezer Ben Yehuda, and he said, “I’m going to bring this language back to life.” And he went on a boat in 1880 to Israel with his wife, who didn’t speak a word of Hebrew, and as they were pulling into the port of Jaffa, he said to her, “These are the last words I will speak to you in German.” That was the language they spoke in his house. “Henceforth, we shall only speak Hebrew.” She learned very quickly. [laughter] When their son was born, his name was Ben Zion, “Son of Zion”, and he was the first person in modern times to speak Hebrew as a native language, as the first language. And in fact, his father, Eliezer, made his mother take a vow that she would never speak to him in any language but Hebrew. He grew up speaking Hebrew as his only language. Later, he learned other languages, but he grew up speaking Hebrew. And today, there are generation after generation of people who speak Hebrew as their native tongue.

Now, I didn’t grow up speaking Hebrew. I grew up speaking this weird Germanic language which is a mix of something from the Anglos, and the French, and it’s called English. Have you heard of it? [laughter] But I grew up reading Hebrew; I was taught to read the Hebrew alphabet alongside the English alphabet, in kindergarten, if I’m not mistaken, but I couldn’t really understand everything. Over the years, I learned more and more, but at one point in my education, my father decided to take me out of the school that was what’s called a Zionist school…

Do you all know what Zionists are? Zionists are Jews who believe that the land of Israel belongs to God’s people, and that we are to live in it if we have the opportunity. And so I was going to a Zionist school, and my father said, “I’m going to take him out and put him in the Ultra-Orthodox school.” My grandmother, who came from Lithuania, she was a Hebrew teacher, and she was livid about this. She was so upset. She said, “If you take him and send him to that school, which is more religious, he’ll have less knowledge of Hebrew.”

Well, after about a year or two in that school, my grandmother was trying to convince my mother to pull me out of the school, send me back to the Zionist school, and to prove that I needed to go back to the Zionist school, she was saying, “Look, your son isn’t learning Hebrew, and this is the language of our people. He’s learning all kinds of rules and regulations and traditions, but he’s not really learning the Hebrew language like he should be.” And my father wanted to prove her wrong, and so he cracked open the Book of Genesis, pointed to a random verse and asked me to translate it. And it just so happens that it came up to be this verse, and I translated it. Genesis 34:4. It said, “And Sh’chem said to his father, ‘Chamor.’” Now, in the English you’ll see a “Shekem” and “Hamor”, but it’s pronounced “Sh’chem”, say, “Sh’chem”.

Audience: Sh’chem.

Nehemia: And chamor. Say, “chamor.”

Audience: Chamor.

Nehemia: Well, I read this verse, and my knowledge of Hebrew was so limited that I didn’t read it correctly. I translated each word by itself, and then put the words together. I basically translated it literally, and because of that, I read it as, “And shoulder said to his father, ‘Donkey.’” [laughter] True story. You know, I knew how to translate the words, but I didn’t know how to translate the sentence. And it took quite a few years of study before I got to that point, but actually, it’s very interesting because the word “sh’chem” means “shoulder”. But it’s also the name of a city in northern Israel, and what’s the English name of that city? Can somebody tell me?

Audience: Shekem.

Nehemia: Well, Shekhem, yeah, but that’s the English pronunciation. No, Nablus. Nablus is the Arabic name for it, but they usually refer to it in English as Nablus. So that’s “Sh’chem,” or “Shekem”. And “Chamor” was this guy’s father, and his father’s name meant “donkey”. And why was his name “donkey?” He was probably really a stubborn guy.

And the way that I learned to speak Hebrew, when I went to Israel and volunteered on that kibbutz, I couldn’t put together a single sentence of Hebrew. By that point, I was much older and I could read the Torah fluently without any problem. But the way I learned to actually be able to speak Hebrew is I was out there in the fields…

Now, one of the things you’ll find in Israel is, most Israelis want to speak to you in English. They love the English language, and if they can improve their English, they can advance in their careers. So while you’re trying to learn Hebrew, they’re trying to learn English. That’s what happens. And so you try to speak to them and they won’t go for it. Well, I was really, really blessed when I went to Israel and was on that kibbutz, because the man who was my boss out there in the field, the supervisor, he was from New York. And so the entire year, he only said to me two things in English, one of them was a dirty joke that I won’t tell you. Maybe I should tell it? [laughter] No. But the rest of the year, he only spoke to me in Hebrew, and this was very difficult for me, at first. He would just start yelling at me in Hebrew.

And let’s see this slide over here. This is what I was facing, a pile of irrigation pipes, and he started yelling at me, “Kakh et hatzinorot vetasim otam sham.” And I’m like, “Whaaat? I’m just an American. I only speak one language.” “Kakh et hatzinorot vetasim otam sham.” And he would just keep doing it, saying that until I did it. And what is he asking me to do? As he’s saying this, “Kakh et hatzinorot vetasim otam sham,” I remember from reading the Bible this… Does anybody know what this is? This is called Warren’s Shaft, and it’s actually mentioned in the Book of Samuel and in Chronicles, where it talks about David capturing the City of Jerusalem. And he says, “The first person to ascend the tzinor…” say, “tzinor”.

Audience: Tzinor.

Nehemia: “He will be given this reward,” and the person who did that as Joab, or Yoav. And by going up the tzinor they were able to capture the city. Well, archaeologists have realized that what he’s talking about is this thing over here. This is Warren’s Shaft, and it was essentially a way for the Canaanites to get water during a siege. And they thought, “Well, this is perfectly safe, because nobody could possibly climb up this,” but Joab figured a way to get up it. And the Hebrew word for this is “tsinor”. Say, “tsinor”.

Audience: Tzinor.

Nehemia: And he was yelling at me, “Take the tzinorot, these things, and move them over there.” Now, there were no shafts out there in the fields, but I realized after he said it about 40 times, that “Oh, in ancient Hebrew, it was a shaft for drawing up water. In modern Hebrew, it’s an aluminum pipe.” That’s what happens. They take a word… like nobody builds water shafts anymore like that. Now, they have pipes. And so that was the modern meaning of the word. And about six months after I was working in those fields getting yelled at, day in and day out… he’s a New Yorker, what do you expect? [laughter] And eventually, I was able to not only understand, I was able to speak, and about six months there of working in the fields, I had something that made me realize, “Wow, God has blessed me greatly.”

What happened to me is, I had a dream, and in the dream, I was speaking Hebrew. And the reason that was significant is that whenever I spoke Hebrew before that, I would have to translate in my head what I wanted to say, and then say it in Hebrew. And then somebody would say something to me in Hebrew, and I would translate it back into English. And in the dream, there was no translation. It was just in Hebrew.

So this prophesy of Zephaniah 3:9, God’s people, the people of Israel are now learning to speak His language. Generation after generation are going back to the pure tongue. The other part of the prophesy talks about, it says that they all may call on the name of Yehovah to serve Him with one accord. And that phrase, “one accord”, is really interesting, because one accord, it literally says, “one sh’chem”. Say, “sh’chem”.

Audience: Sh’chem.

Nehemia: And you remember what sh’chem means, in addition…?

Audience: Shoulder.

Nehemia: It means shoulder, exactly. And what does it mean, “To serve Yehovah with one shoulder?” What it means is that back in the Tower of Babel, they came together. They were standing shoulder-to-shoulder, saying, “Let us build this. Nimrod - let us rebel against the God of creation. Let us build this together standing shoulder-to-shoulder.” And God is saying in this prophesy, in the end time, when He restores that language, we won’t come together to build something for our name, to build our name. We’ll come together for His name, to call upon His name.

And here’s really, for me, a picture of fulfilment of this prophesy - Me and Keith standing together, shoulder-to-shoulder, calling upon the name of Yehovah. [applause] Now, I know there’s a moron out there watching on cyberspace who’s going to say, “Nehemia has proclaimed Keith to be the Messiah.” [laughter] Lest you think that, what I’m saying is, this is a picture for people to emulate, not that I’m something special, or Keith is something special - although Georgia thinks I’m quite special, my dog - but that this is simply a picture of the fulfilment of prophesy, and it’s one that can be repeated. It’s one that can then spread throughout the entire world, where all mankind is standing together, shoulder-to-shoulder, not to build up our own names, but to build up His name. May it be soon.

I’m going to close with this, which is a verse from Genesis chapter 12 verse 3. And it says, “Venivrechu vecha kol mishpakhot ha’adamah,” which means, “And in you, all the families of the earth will be blessed.” And the Hebrew phrase, “will be blessed”, those Hebrew words is the one Hebrew word, “venivrechu”. Can you say, “venivrechu?

Audience: Venivrechu.

Nehemia: You know, I don’t feel like you’re really… Let’s do it again, “venivrechu”.

Audience: Venivrechu.

Nehemia: All right, you’re working with me. Excellent. So “venivrechu”, now who is this said to? It was said to Abraham, who back then was known as Abram. Somebody say, “first witness”.

Audience: First witness.

Nehemia: This verse appears almost word for word a second time, in Genesis 18:18. It says, “Venivrechu vo kol goyei ha’aretz”. “And in him all the nations,” instead of families, “all the nations of the earth will be blessed.” And again, it’s “venivrechu”. Say, “venivrechu”.

Audience: Venivrechu.

Nehemia: Somebody say, “second witness”.

Audience: Second witness.

Nehemia: It appears with a slightly different wording. Instead of “venivrechu”, it’s “vehitbarachu”. I won’t confuse you by making you say that, but it’s another form of the same word. Genesis 22:18 again, third time, now to Abraham. “And in your descendants, all of the nations of the earth will be blessed.” And again, it’s the same root, which is three Hebrew letters, the letters Bet, say, “Bet”.

Audience: Bet.

Nehemia: Reish.

Audience: Reish.

Nehemia: Khaf.

Audience: Khaf.

Nehemia: Now, those three Hebrew letters come from the word “berekh“. Remember, I mentioned how Hebrew starts off with concrete concepts which then become abstract? The concrete concept here, or term, is “berekh”. This is a berekh, a knee. Say, “knee”.

Audience: Knee.

Nehemia: So if you want to translate it literally, “And your descendants, in all the nations of the earth will be kneed,” or something to do with knees. It doesn’t make a lot of sense, if you translate it literally. But the concept of blessed comes from the knee. Now, originally when somebody would kneel down before God, or a king, and bless them, that’s how we got the term for blessing, because they were on their knees. And when a father would bless his son, he would put his little son on his knee and bless him, and that’s how it’s connected to knee. But that’s not quite what’s going on here, because how is it that all the families of the earth are blessed through Abraham and his descendants?

Let’s look at a few more verses. Genesis 26:14, this blessing is passed on to Isaac. Somebody say, “not Ishmael”.

Audience: Not Ishmael.

Nehemia: Is passed on to Isaac, and it says, “Vahitbarchu b’zarkha kol goyei ha’aretz”. “And in your descendants, all the nations of the earth will be blessed”. Somebody say, “fourth witness”.

Audience: Fourth witness.

Nehemia: Fifth witness, “venivrechu…” again, “venivrekhu bekha kol mishpakhot ha’adamah u’vezareicha.” “And in you and your descendants, all the families of the earth will be blessed.” Five times, we have this prophesy. Is this something important, or some trivial thing? I think it’s important if it’s mentioned five times.

Well, here’s what it means. Before I get to that, should I bring that? All right, I want to bring that. This was something that a Messianic rabbi told me down in Florida, a rabbi named Ira Michaelson. Hi, Ira. He told me this explanation, and I thought, “Oh, that’s some stupid Christian thing. He’s bringing his baggage from all those years of being influenced by that stuff.” But then I thought, “Okay, I’m going to go and investigate and see if this is actually the case.” And what I found - and I’ll tell you in a minute what I’m talking about – what I found is that the rabbis talk about their understanding of what it means for all the families of the earth to be blessed. And here’s what they said, it’s in the Talmud.

They quote this verse. It says, “Rabbi Eliezer said, ‘What is meant by the verse, And all the families of the earth will be blessed, venivrechu, in you?’ The Holy One, blessed be He, said to Abraham…” Now, this isn’t in the Bible, it doesn’t literally say that, but it’s a paraphrase of what they understand. “I have two good branches to graft into you, Ruth the Moabite, and Naama the Amonite”. Now, what’s going on there? What’s happening is, the rabbis interpreted “venivrechu”, say, “venivrechu…

Audience: Venivrechu.

Nehemia: They interpreted that as an agricultural term. And it turns out, there’s an agricultural term, “lehavrich”, from the same exact word meaning knee, and it means, to graft. Now, why does it mean to graft? Because in agriculture, in ancient agriculture, there were two ways of grafting on a branch. You could lop off the old branches at the root, at the trunk, and then you tie or attach somehow the branch onto that root, and it will grow into it, and that’s a way of grafting.

Another way of grafting is the branch is growing out, and you only cut off part of it, and you take the new branch and you stick it onto that part. And then, you usually do that at a right angle, and that forms a knee. And hence, “to knee”, “lehavrich”, is to graft.

Now, when I saw this in the writings of the rabbis in the Talmud, I got to admit to you, I wasn’t very impressed, because after all, the Talmud says all kinds of whacky things, it really does. What I did want to see though is what do the Hebrew linguists say, you know, the great experts of the Hebrew language? Many of them lived many years after the Talmud. One of the greatest ones is a rabbi named Rashbam. Rashbam was the grandson of Rashi, and he’s actually considered to be one of the greatest Bible commentators who ever lived. Let me just show you this, by the way. We have here, what they’ve done is they’ve taken “venivrechu”, say, “venivrechu“.

Audience: Venivrechu.

Nehemia: And the word “breichot”, say, “breichot”.

Audience: Breichot.

Nehemia: “Breichot” means “branches”, an agricultural term, and “lehavrich”, which means, “to graft”. Say, “lehavrivh”.

Audience: Lehavrivch.

Nehemia: And they say, “Wait a minute. All three are of the same root. “Venivrechu”, instead of, “And they will be blessed”, can mean, “And they will be grafted”. And this is what the Rashbam says. He says, “Will be blessed, this is a term of grafting. That is to say, the families of the earth will be mixed in with your family”. “And in you and your descendants, all the families of the earth will be blessed”, can be legitimately translated, based on sound Hebrew linguistics as “In your and your descendants, all the families of the earth will be grafted.” Woo! [applause]

I’m excited. Now, that’s really interesting. So what’s going on here? I don’t have to tell you guys that in the New Testament, Paul has this whole image of the grafting in. Paul, though, tells us he was a Pharisee. He was probably aware of this interpretation of the rabbis, that in Genesis, when it talks about all the nations of the earth being blessed, that the way they were going to be blessed was to be grafted into Israel. Isn’t that amazing?

Audience: Yes!

Nehemia: Can I get an Amen?

Audience: Amen! [applause]

Nehemia: Wow. You know, going around the world and seeing people from every language, and literally every continent being drawn to the God of Israel, I am seeing this grafting take place. And one of the really exciting things to me is that in October, this is going to come out. This is the Chinese translation of A Prayer to Our Father. [applause] Woo!

Lest you think I’m excited about this because I’m going to be making a whole bunch of money, the Chinese translator wrote to Keith and me and he said, what he wants to do is be able to give away thousands of copies to pastors in mainland China, because the truth is, they don’t have the availability to buy books about this topic in China. It’s not readily available, but they’re doing a conference, and he wants to be able to give away 5,000 copies. And he said, “In order to be able to do that, I need you, Nehemia, and you, Keith, to give up your loyalty”. I said, “Give up my loyalty? [laughter] No way am I going to swear loyalty to the government of China. I don’t know what you’re talking about. I will not do that. I’m a very loyal person, and I’m very loyal to Keith”.

And Keith explained to me. He says, “Nehemia, he means give up your royalty”. [laughter] So we’ve given up our royalty - our loyalty - in order to get this book into the hands of 5,000 Christian pastors from mainland China. [applause]

This book is actually going out through the China Alliance Press. What that means is, it’s actually passed the pen of the censor, of the mainland Chinese censor. So it’s actually legal to have these books in China. They’ve picked through every character and every word, and said, “Okay, you’re allowed to have this book.” And to me… I don’t care about myself and this book, and that I’m not making any money on it, anyway. The significance of this, to me, is there are people who are interested in this in mainland China. There was someone who gave of his time and his own money in China to translate this book, on his own initiative. He wrote to us and said, “I wish I could get this book in Chinese.” And I wrote back and I said, “Translate it, and you can.” And he did, and now it’s being distributed to thousands of people. To me, this is a sign [applause] of great things that are happening, that people around the world are being stirred. Something in their heart is drawing them into the covenant, and to the God of Israel.

To me, this is like the magic carpet arriving, and swooping off the Jews of Yemen, and bringing the Jews over in a couple of days, from Ethiopia, and the 1.1 million Jews who came from the former Soviet Union. This is biblical proportions, these fulfilments of prophesies. And may it be soon that we all are together in the land, standing shoulder-to-shoulder, [applause] speaking Hebrew, calling upon the name of our God.

One final thing I didn’t bring. I have another slide, and that was like the crescendo. No, but I’ve got to bring this, I forgot all about this. I mean, I’ve got to bring this here, Ovadia chapter 1 verse 20. “And the captivity of this host of the Children of Israel that are amongst the Canaanites…” Say, “Canaanites”.

Audience: Canaanites.

Nehemia: “…as far as France”. It says here, “Tsarfat”, which they translate as “France”, “…and the captivity of Jerusalem, that is in Sfarad”, “in Spain”. Somebody say, “New Spain”.

Audience: New Spain.

Nehemia: “…shall inherit the cities of the Negev.” [applause] This is a prophesy that millions… It doesn’t say how many. It’s a prophesy that the captivity of Jerusalem, scattered among the lands of Spain, who will come back and inherit the lands of the south of Israel. Woo! [applause]

And I am so excited to be talking to you about this here, in New Mexico, which is the focal point of millions of anusim, who are returning to their faith. [applause] Now, when I first talked about this with Keith, about coming here - actually he was talking and I was typing, because I had lost my voice, and for three days I couldn’t speak. Literally, I couldn’t put out a peep. And I’m thinking that maybe I couldn’t put out a peep so that God would be preparing me for Yom Teruah. Say, “Yom Teruah”.

Audience: Yom Teruah.

Nehemia: Yom Teruah, many people translate it as “the Day of Trumpets”, but it literally means “the day of shouting and the day of trumpeting”. Teruah is a noise that you make with the horn, with a shofar, or a trumpet, or with your voice. And it may be in order for me to appreciate that teruah, God took away my voice for three days. Woo! [applause]

Now, we’re almost done. Let’s look at this verse here, Matthew 24:31. “And He shall send His angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one end of the heaven to the other.” [applause] Hold on, let’s back up. I’m a Karaite Jew. I’m not supposed to be bringing this verse, and I know some of my Jewish brothers and sisters are going to throw me under the bus for bringing this. But before they do that, I want to show you where this comes from.

You know, Paul in Rome, he’s talking about grafted - he didn’t make that up. That was from Genesis. So where does this come from? And I think it starts out in Numbers chapter 10 verses 5 to 7.

It describes there two different types of blasts of the shofar. The first one is called “t’kiah”, say, “t’kiah”.

Audience: T’kiah.

Nehemia: The other is called “t’ruah”, say, “t’ruah”.

Audience: T’ruah.

Nehemia: And t’kiah was to gather the camp. T’ruah was to move the camp. And these were the instructions in the desert, when they were moving as a camp, all of Israel. T’kiah, he would gather the camp, and t’ruah, he would move the camp. Now, what is the difference between t’kiah and t’ruah? And the truth is, there are different traditions in the Jewish sources about what exactly these are. But basically, we know that t’kiah is a long, unbroken sound, and t’ruah is a staccato, you know, like duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh sound.

So I’m going to, because I’m asthmatic, I’m not going to blow the shofar, but I’m going to ask my shofar expert, the Methodist, Keith Johnson, to illustrate for you the t’kiah and the t’ruah. So, can we get a t’kiah, Keith?

Keith: [blows t’kiah on shofar]

Nehemia: Gather the camp. And now a t’ruah, Keith.

Keith: [blows Teruah on shofar]

Nehemia: Excellent. Now, that is to move the camp. And maybe those instructions for the camp in the desert will be applied again in the end times, when God wants to gather the people and then tell the people to move. And that actually ties it in to Yom T’ruah, the day of moving the camp, of blowing the shofar, of the staccato sound, duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh. Let’s get into the t’ruah.

Keith: [blows Teruah on shofar]

Nehemia: Woo! [applause] Now, how do we know this still applies today, because that was just some weird thing for the desert that he did when they were in the camp. Numbers chapter 10 verse 8, it says, “And the sons of Aaron shall blow the trumpets…” it’s talking about the silver trumpets, “…and they shall be for an eternal statute,” say, “eternal statute”.

Audience: Eternal statute.

Nehemia: “…throughout your generations.” Now, what application could this possibly have today? Numbers chapter 10 verse 10, “When you go out to war in your land against the troubler who troubles you,” that’s what it literally says - “ha tza’ar tzorer otkhah”, “the troubles you, you shall blow a t’ruah on the trumpets, and you shall be remembered before Yehovah, your God. [applause] And you shall be saved…” Somebody say, “saved”.

Audience: Saved.

Nehemia: “…from your enemies.” So when you go out against your troubler and you blow the t’ruah, duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh, Yehovah will hear that in heaven and He will save you from your enemies. Woo! [applause]

I was just minding my business in the ivory tower. I wasn’t looking for this! [laughter] He had other plans.

Last verse, and then I’ll close, Isaiah 27:13, “And it shall come to pass on that day a great shofar…” woo! “will be blown. And those who are…”

Keith: [blows shofar]

Nehemia: There it is, “on that day, a great shofar will be blown, and those who are perishing in the land of Assyria and the outcasts in the land of Egypt will come and bow down to Yehovah on the holy mountain in Jerusalem.”

And may that be soon, that His messengers go forth and blow that great shofar. And when you hear the blow of that great shofar, don’t shut the door.

[applause]

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Keep Reading – Keith Johnson (Open Door Series – Part 7)

Keith Johnson speaks in Albuquerque, New Mexico on the topic of "Keep Reading."

Transcript

Keep Reading – Keith Johnson (Open Door Series - Part 7)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Keith: If we go to… let’s see here, Psalms 80:18, I’m going to put it up on the screen. And as we were at Shavuot, my Jewish friend, Nehemia Gordon and I had had an encounter that literally changed our lives first. Then that encounter spilled out of our lives and began to touch other people.

When we were at Shavuot, we had some technical difficulties. I think it was actually the Creator of the universe, because He already knew that we were going to do what we were going to do there, but that we were going to continue when we got here. So I never got to really talk about this verse. This verse has gotten me into a lot of trouble, say, “trouble…”

Audience: Trouble!

Keith: … because it comes from what they call the “Old Testament”. And you see, in the Old Testament, when I first became a Christian at age 15, they handed me two books. One was a big book, I mean, it was thick. And I was not one who grew up in the church. I didn’t have much background in the church, and they said, “Here’s your choices. You can either read from the big book, or we’ve got this little thin book, and this would be all you need.” Now, be a 15-year-old from inner city of Minneapolis, having never been in the church and someone says, “You can either read this or you can read that,” come on, somebody.

Woman: That.

Keith: Which one are you going to pick? I picked the Book of John. They gave me the Book of John, I read it quickly and I said, “Now what?” They said, “You’ve graduated. We’re now going to let you read one of the other Gospels, the Book of Matthew.” And so they said again, “Now, here are your choices. There’s this book or this book. Which one are you going to choose?” I said, “I’ll take this one.”

And I opened up the Book of Matthew, and it said, “This is the genealogy of Jesus.” And then it went on, and it said, “from, or son of…” and then they started giving these weird names that I did not learn in the Book of John - David, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob. And I said, “Who are these people?”

“Don’t worry about it, just keep reading.”

And I’d go through the genealogy and it’d talk about Ruth, and Bathsheba. “Who are these people?” “Don’t worry about it, just keep reading.” And I got to the end of Matthew, and come to find out when I read through Matthew that there’s no way I could understand Matthew unless I were to go back to the big book.

Man: Halleluyah!

Keith: And when I would go back to the big book, my life began to change. And they told me in the church, “Don’t take the big book so seriously. It’s good for stories. You can preach it every once in a while. But spend most of your time in the skinny book.”

About three years ago, I was sitting in front of the television and I was watching 60 Minutes. And 60 Minutes came on talking about the history of Christianity, and they said these words. They said, “You know, we’ve done a survey amongst all the pastors and all the people, and we’ve come up with an amazing discovery. They say, ‘You can have present-day Christianity without Jesus.’”

Audience: Wooh!

Keith: And they caught my attention. They said, “But you cannot have present-day Christianity without Paul.” 60 Minutes said this, you can check it for yourself. We probably have the DVD right here at A Rood Awakening. “60 Minutes!” [laughter]

And when I watched that, and when I saw that, it concerned me, because I thought to myself, “Where did they get this information?” I come to find out that they’ve gone and done surveys amongst people in churches, and pastors. And what they figured out is that most pastors, when they stand up on Sunday mornings, have decided to leave the big book behind. And you know those words in the Gospels and the Red Letters, those are just a little bit too radical. Let’s get to Paul.

So when I was at Shavuot, I was going to share this particular verse, and come to find out that as a result of this verse, as excited as I was about people learning that we could revive, we could be revived to call upon His name, there was a huge backlash. There were people that said this to me: “You cannot go into the Old Testament and talk about revival, a part of New Testament theology.” Now, if you believe that, you probably are not going to like the message. Look at your neighbor and say, “It don’t matter.”

Audience: It don’t matter.

Keith: Because what I must do this morning is go to Paul. Amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: You know, people are getting nervous with me hanging around with a Karaite Jew. “Keith, you’re always talking about the Hebrew. You’re always talking about the Old Testament. Heck, you don’t even talk enough about the New Testament. Whatever happened to Paul?” Hey, look at your neighbor and say, “Today…”

Audience: Today.

Keith: “… the Methodist…”

Audience: The Methodist.

Keith: “… is going to talk about Paul.”

Audience: Is going to talk about Paul.

Keith: But before I do that, revive us and we will call upon Your name. Now, let me tell you something, I want to give you another slide here, if I can. Wait a second. Okay, if I can. Excellent. Great slide. Now, you’re going to look at this. People use this all the time, in fact, it’s in the back of my book. It says, “Therefore, My people shall know My name; therefore, in that day, I am the One who was speaking. ‘Here I am.’” And when I read that verse, when I see that verse, it just causes me to think that the Creator of the universe is deciding in this time, to make us, say, “make us…”

Audience: Make us.

Keith: …know His name.

Audience: Know His name.

Keith: He’s causing people around the world to know His name. But I did a radical thing this weekend. I decided to do what we’re going to do today. I decided to keep reading. And what I decided to do, as a result of one of my friends, who came up and said to me what she had read, I decided to look at the verse before my favorite verse.

Now, if you would put it up here, what it says is this. “Again, the Lord declares, ‘Those who rule over them howl…” Say, “howl”.

Audience: Howl.

Keith: “And My name is continually blasphemed.” Say, “blasphemed”.

Audience: Blasphemed.

Keith: “All day long.” I’m going to tell you something. There is some howling going on right now. I thought I should - I should say, I assumed - that people would be excited if we could bring the most recent information, and the recent revelation, and the recent scholarship on God’s name. I thought that especially amongst those that call themselves Messianics, they would be excited that there’s new information that they did not have before, that would help them call on God’s name, and come to find out that they had more interest in staying in the spirit of tradition than encountering new truth.

And this caused me a great concern, because I did not understand. If we can show you something that you can see, and the most complete and available Hebrew manuscripts, wherein you can learn His name, don’t you want it? And they would say, “Not if it ain’t what I already know.”

But I’m so happy that there are some of you here that are not so interested in staying around the tulips of tradition.

[applause]

I’m so happy that there are people that are listening that are saying, “Just give it to me the way it is.” Oh, but I’ve met so many in the movement that say, “Do not confuse me with fact, when I’ve already got my tradition.” So as I was going through this information with my friend, Nehemia, go back to the slide. It says, “Again, the Lord declares…” and of course, you already know because you are the experts. But because of my concern for my brother and sister pastors that are in churches, and because of my concern for my sisters and brothers that are still behind the walls of churches in their process, many of them do not know. So please bear with me while I explain something to them. If we see the word “Lord”, say, “Lord”.

Audience: Lord.

Keith: That is simply a tradition followed as far back as we know, at least 1,900 years, where Christian theologians and scribes have decided that you don’t need to know His name. So what they have done is, they’ve found a wonderful little title, and in order to show you that it’s a special title, they capitalize it, “L-O-R-D” Lord. Now, here’s where the controversy comes in. People start saying, “Well, how do I pronounce it?” And I’ve written a book, His Hallowed Name Revealed Again, with only one chapter on pronunciation, but 11 chapters on information. And do you know that I have people that will say, “Because you pronounce the name differently, I don’t want the most updated information.” Can you believe that?

Hey, put aside the pronunciation for a minute, and just learn the information. Because what I’m finding, there are so many people who do not have the information and yet, they’re out beating people over the head with pronunciation. And can I just say it right now? So many of them that are beating people on the head with pronunciation are wrong about the information.

Can I say that again?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: Or should I leave that alone?

Audience: No!

Keith: If we have information that will change your approach, why wouldn’t you want it? Only if there’s an agenda behind your decision. Can I do something? Hold on. Can you put the slide up? Now, don’t say this too loud. Those that are listening, don’t get concerned. But according to the most complete Hebrew manuscripts that we have, if we were to read it in Hebrew, what we would find when we come across L-O-R-D, and I’m not going to let it stay up too long, because it’s very controversial, we would find this. Let’s go, if you want more information, get the book. Now, open your Bibles, let’s go to the message.

After Shavuot, Nehemia was so inspired, he opened the door to the spirit of the living God. And as he opened the door to the spirit of the living God, two things happened. One, God said, “Okay.” Two, he got into a lot of trouble. People called us, leaders of the top religious institutions, put us on conference call and said, “What have you two done?”

And do you know what Nehemia said? “Now, we have their attention.” [laughter and applause] Nehemia said, “Now we have their attention, let’s turn up the heat.”

So Nehemia gets on Messiah’s Branch Radio, without telling me in advance, invites me on and says, “Keith, we have a radio interview, and it’s got a few things I want to share.” And I’m thinking, “It’s just another interview.” We get on the interview, and Nehemia gets on the interview and he says this. “This fall, Keith and I will be traveling all over the United States.” And then he says something really radical. He says, “This fall, we’re coming in the spirit of revival.” [applause]

Now, at this point, I’m a little nervous, because I’m thinking, “Now Nehemia, look. It was a good shtick. We had the DVD, it’s there. Let’s just move on.” He’s like, “No, the door is still open. The spirit of God is still working.” And he’s on the radio station, proclaiming and saying, “There’s going to be revival in His name.”

And the more he would talk, the more I’d get excited. You guys think you saw someone preach? You think the Methodists can shout? You should hear the Karaite when the Holy Ghost touches him. [applause] He’s on Messiah’s, say, “Messiah’s…”

Audience: Messiah’s.

Keith: …Branch Radio. And he’s saying, “We’re going to come in the spirit of revival,” and then he gets behind his little computer. And he starts typing, and pretty soon, Nehemia gets on his little newsletter. And he sends it out all over the world, and it’s up online, on aprayertoourfather.com. where he starts talking about all these things.

And then he says, “Listen. There was a certain thing that happened on July 15th,” and he gives the date. And he says, “You know what? There was a time where the folks came in France and released the prisoners from the Bastille Prison. And it happened on the very day,” it happened 200 years later, he says, “this is the celebration of that day.”

And then, he puts this wonderful little picture, because Nehemia, he can’t just write. He’s got to come up with these little pictures, so he comes up with this picture, I want to show it to you, real quick. This is Bastille Day. And from what I understand, that is Nehemia’s uncle, great-great-great-great-great-great Nehemia Gordon. [laughter] And he gives this picture and he says, “This is the spirit by which we’re coming. There are people in prison on the…” come on, somebody. Hello, somebody, “…on the other side of the wall.” And he says, “We’re coming, and if it takes sword, if it takes fire, if it takes conflict, if it takes problems, we are coming to set somebody free!”

[applause]

Now, I didn’t tell you something. This morning, as Michael was walking the streets, so was I. And I have to tell you, if he was walking the streets talking about what he was going to do, I was walking the streets saying, “Father, do I have to do it?” [laughter] Because I have to tell you something. This is as real as it gets for me. I don’t know about you who grew up in the church. I don’t know about your experiences. I don’t know about your denominations. Can I just tell you about what happened to me? God touched me at 14. I didn’t understand church. God called me to go to the place that you call “cemetery”.

But let me tell you what God did for me. God used seminary to give me information that I would not have had, had I not gone. And then, God took me through a process where He began to learn, and teach, and do these things in me. But He never set aside that thing inside of me, that thing that makes me want to shout, the thing that makes me want to move in His spirit. What He did is say, “Keith, you just stay where you are, but I’m going to add some information.”

I love the fact that the Bishop of the Methodist Church has still not kicked me out yet. I love the fact that they still allow me to be in that movement, and I’m going to tell you why. As much as I love meetings like this, there is a group of people that I want to get to, that are behind the walls of the Bastille prison. I want to do whatever I can do to help them get free.

Now, I didn’t know I’d be hooking up with a Jewish man. I thought he would just stay in that place, being a nice little Hebrew scholar, where he teaches me and we learn Hebrew together. But for some reason, and I’m not sure why, somebody say, “God”.

Audience: God.

Keith: For whatever reason, God has decided to touch Nehemia Gordon deep down in his gut, so that he stands with the Methodists and says, “we…” Say, “we”.

Audience: We.

Keith: Come on, somebody. Say, “we”.

Audience: We.

Keith: Are coming. Somebody say, “are coming”.

Audience: Are coming.

Keith: In the spirit.

Audience: In the spirit.

Keith: Of revival.

Audience: Of revival.

Keith: So that.

Audience: So that.

Keith: We can.

Audience: We can.

Keith: Call.

Audience: Call.

Keith: Upon.

Audience: Upon.

Keith: His.

Audience: His.

Keith: Name.

Audience: Name.

Keith: Give Him praise. [applause] Halleluyah!

Now that I’ve had my morning preaching fix, can I tell you what happened?

Man: Yes, please.

Keith: After he got on the radio and we talked to the lead people of the different religious institutions, Jewish and Christian alike, I received this letter. And the letter said, “Greetings, Mr. Johnson.” And it started this way. “I have followed Nehemia Gordon for several years. He’s very intelligent.” Whenever they start out like this, they go and drop the bomb on you. “He is very intelligent. He is nice, he is well schooled. His Hebrew Matthew Book is very interesting. I’ve read a little bit about you, and it seems that you have a very impressive resume.” Somebody say, “amen”.

Audience: Amen.

Keith: You know, Michael’s up here, supposed to introduce me. “Who do you want to talk about?” “Nehemia Gordon, Nehemia Gordon. And by the way, Keith.” “Okay, no problem. [laughter] And you also have an impressive resume.” Do you all know my resume? I graduated cum laude from the Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. And my professors are saying, “Lordy, how come we let him graduate cum laude?” [laughter]

“I see that you too are doing a Storming the Bastille tour with Nehemia Gordon.” And then, he goes on to quote my friend’s words. “Nehemia said, ‘This fall, Keith and I will be coming…’ I haven’t told Keith, ‘in the spirit of revival, storming the spiritual Bastille, setting people free in the name, Yehovah, the Father of creation. Join us in opening the door and proclaiming the verse: Revive us, and we will call upon Your name.’”

And the man says this to me. I will not tell you his name, but as you could tell, I’m still holding the paper, and all you need to know is the paper is heavy. “Spirit of revival! Setting people free! While it seems that you are both well accomplished in your own realms,” and he goes on to say this, “unless Nehemia has converted, you are both unequally yoked. From my knowledge…” Somebody say, “my knowledge”.

Audience: My knowledge.

Keith: I wish more people would just say that, “From my knowledge…”

Audience: From my knowledge.

Keith: “… this may or may not be an issue for Nehemia, but it most definitely is for you.” And so what I’ve decided to do as a warm-up for this afternoon, which is a warm-up for Sunday afternoon, I decided to go to the verse that he decided to use. Let’s do that real quickly.

He said to me, “Spirit of revival! Setting people free! You are unequally yoked.” Turn to 2 Corinthians, if you would. And people have had issues with me again, because I spent so much time in the Tanakh, 10 years with my friend, Nehemia Gordon, learning the very Bible that Yeshua himself read. I was able to receive a scroll, I’m not going to tell you that story. I have Nehemia and others talk about it, it’s on the DVD. But what I love about having this backup, this has got my back. I so much love the fact that the Torah has my back, because that’s the very book that Yeshua read. It’s his Bible.

So when he came into the Synagogue and they said, “Let us read the Torah scroll,” and they said, “Who wants to read?” Yeshua would be in the back and he’d raise his hand and say, “Can I read?” And the rabbi would let him come down the aisle, and they would open up the scroll, and Yeshua would read it, just the way it was. And I want to give you a secret. He did not read it in the King James Version. He read it in the language that his Father gave it - Hebrew.

So people have attacked and they’ve said, “Keith, you’ve spent too much time with Gordon. All you’re doing is talking about the Bible that Yeshua read. Can’t you do something in the very part of the Bible that makes Christianity?” I said, “Okay, I’m going to be going to A Rood Awakening.” I would like to answer this man according to what he said, from my knowledge.

2 Corinthians 6:14 says this, “Be not unequally yoked together with unbelievers.” I want you to see something, real quick. If I open up the very Bible that people say Paul actually wrote, the Greek, bear with me real quick. It says this. “Be ye not heterozugountes,” that is Greek. Say, “Greek”.

Audience: Greek.

Keith: “…together with unbelievers.” Now, when I read that, the first thing I want to ask is this. Is this a word that’s used anywhere else in the New Testament? I come to find out that heterozugountes is not used anywhere else in the New Testament. Then, what I want to do is, I want to go to the Old Testament, the big part of the Bible to see, because I’ll tell you another secret. Paul didn’t pull stuff out of his head. Paul didn’t just make up stuff. Paul understood this very same book that Yeshua read, Paul understood it to be the very oracle of God.

Now, I have some opinions, we can talk about it later, about why there have been so many changes with Paul. But I’m going to just stick right here with what we have. I’m going to give you a quick thing here. If I find this word, “Thou shalt not let thy cattle gender with a diverse kind,” if I look and come to find out it is a time where the very word that’s used in the New Testament is used in the Old Testament, these two words, one time in the New Testament, one time in the Old Testament, and come to find out, if I spend time understanding this word, the best way I could say it is, it says, “Be ye not mis-mated.” Say, “mis-mated”.

Audience: Mis-mated.

Keith: The idea in Leviticus is, you don’t want two different kinds of animals. And of course, this is a wonderful verse that Nehemia was trying to teach before the Holy Ghost got a hold of him at Shavuot, on the spiritual mixing of seed. But if you read it for yourself, you’ll find that that is exactly what we’re talking of. So it says, “Be ye not mis-mated.” Now, what we’re going to do is, we’re going to go on. It says, if you continue reading, “Be not eterozugountes together with apistois.” Say, “apistois”.

Keith: Now, what we want to do is keep it up there, and we’re going to look at something. If I go to another part where Paul actually is using the same word, 1 Corinthians 6:6 says, “But brother goes to law against brother, and that before unbelievers,” or apiston. Why am bringing this? The reason I’m bringing this, is this: What we want to find out when we’re reading the Bible is where the writer uses words, and how those words are used.

If we go to the story, the aspect of brother not going against brother, Paul was writing that to Jews. Somebody say, “uh-oh”.

Audience: Uh-oh.

Keith: “Do not go before the unbelievers,” Paul was saying, not, “Do not go before those who have a theological issue. Do not take your act, your issue, before the Greek judges, who do not believe the way you believe. They are unbelievers.”

Now, if we continue, continue with me, I want to show you the next slide. What it says is this. “For what fellowship…” and I love this part. Bear with me on this part. “For what fellowship…” and this is the man telling me, “hath righteousness with unrighteousness?” If I look at the word that Paul’s using, it’s “dikaiosune”. Now, if we see righteousness, there’s a word that we expect for Paul to use in the next part. Keep the slide up there, one second. What we’re going to need to do is, we’re going to show you an example.

In 1 Corinthians 13:6 it says, “Love does not rejoice with unrighteousness.” So there’s a word that Paul uses here that is this, “adikia”. Say, “adikia”. That is the opposite of “dikaiosune”, but guess - and keep the slide up there for a minute, because I’m going to try my best to stay calm. [laughter] If you keep the slide up there just one minute, I’m going to try to stay calm. Paul could have used “unrighteousness”, “adikia”. Guess what Paul uses? “Anomia”.

Audience: Anomia.

Keith: Come on, hit your neighbor, say, “Here it comes.” Hit your neighbor and say, “Here it comes.” Tell your neighbor, “Here it comes now.” We’re not in the Torah. We’re not in the Tanakh. We’re not in the Writings. We’re not even in the Gospels. We’re with Paul, the very basis of why Christianity is supposed to be together. We’re with Paul, the very verse that the man is using saying, “You’d better not hang out with Gordon, because he is an unbeliever. You are mis-mated with him.” What fellowship has righteousness with what we would think is adikia, rather we see anomia, so here’s what we need to do. Let’s go to the slides again. A- plus nomia, A equals without. Say, “without”.

Audience: Without.

Keith: Then we see nomia equals Torah. Say, “Torah”. Then we see anomia, somebody say, “Without Torah.” [applause] I’ve got to stop right here, for a second. Paul is saying – and excuse me for saying, “Paul is saying,” maybe I should say, “Shaul is saying…” Shaul is saying, “Listen. Now, do not hook up with those that are righteous and those who are without Torah.” The word “nomos” is used throughout the Greek Old Testament, which is a translation of the word “Torah”. So what is Paul saying in this verse? He could have just said, “adikia”. Instead, he says, “Look it, what connection is there with righteousness, and those without Torah?”

Now, in case you guys are getting nervous, I suppose I should bring another verse, because I can sense a little bit of… It’s not in the room now. It’s probably some people that are watching online that are saying, “Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. What are you saying, Methodist?” So what I’m going to do is, I’m going to get radical. Rather than me telling you your opinion, I thought, “Let me see if I can find a verse where the one named Jesus or Yeshua actually did it.”

Now, I say, “Jesus” sometimes, because the people I’m trying to reach, many of them do not know, he came in a name. And so what they don’t understand is, they only have what they’ve been given, so they call him “Jesus”, and some of you all beat them over the head, because they say, “Jesus”. It’s all right. They’re coming!

[applause]

If we go to a verse from Jesus, or Yeshua, we will find this verse in Matthew 7:23 and give it to me up on the line. It says, “And then…” and this is him speaking, “I will declare to them, I never knew you Depart from me, you who practice…”

[applause]

The Methodists didn’t say it. Michael didn’t say it. Before Paul ever knew it, Yeshua said it. Yeshua said, “Look, there’s going to be a time where if you ain’t got that, you don’t know Me.”

[applause]

That’s probably a little controversial, so let’s do a really radical thing. This side of the room, your word is “keep”. Say, “keep”.

Audience: Keep.

Keith: Almost. This side of the room, your word is “reading”. Say, “reading”.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: Now, every time I go to this side of the room, you’re going to say…

Audience: Keep.

Keith: And this side will say…

Audience: Reading.

Keith: And that’s what some of my Methodist brothers and sisters are saying now. “Will you get off that verse and…”

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: Very well, let’s continue. “And what communion hath light with darkness.” Let’s get radical and take a look. If we go into the Greek, then many of my professors would say, “Keith, the most important thing is the Greek.” And guess what? I studied the Greek. I love using the Greek. However, I also love to find out where the Greek came from. And what communion hath photi,” say, “photi.”

Audience: Photi.

Keith: “…with darkness?” If we open up the Hebrew Bible that Yeshua read and that Paul studied from under Galileo, Galileo, he would go back and find that the actual word of photi is “ohr”. Say, “ohr”.

Audience: Ohr.

Keith: Now, say it from the screen, real quick. If we go to this verse, which I love, it says this. “Ki ner mitzvah ve’Torah ohr.” We find a play on words, that the word “ohr” plays on the word “T-ohr-ah” though it is not the same root word, the sound is the same.

So when I come across a verse like this, “For the commandment is a lamp and the Torah is an ohr”, or a light. [sings] Why Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and an ohr unto… They ought to let me sing. And an ohr unto my path. Oh, some of us need to learn to grab the flashlight, in the darkness of this world. Oh, I wish I could pick it up, but Michael said, “Don’t touch it.” [laughter] No, it says it right there. “Do not touch.” But oh, if I could just roll it and walk around New Mexico, with the Torah, oh, I’m convinced that in the midst of the darkness of this world, it would be an ohr, light.

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: Now, comes the controversy. I had to keep reading if I could get to the moneyball verse, and here it is, up on the screen. “And what concord has Christ with Belial?” Oh, some of your Bibles are going to tell you that there’s going to be a little asterisk, and if you go down to the asterisk, it will say to you that Belial represents Satan, in some translations.

But if I go to the Pope’s Bible - you know he’s got a Bible, too - now, his Bible don’t match with this, in many cases. He’s got an encyclopaedia that doesn’t match with this right here. But let the Pope do what the Pope does. He eventually is going to meet the real Holy Father, and I don’t want to be there when it happens.

Now, you all, if I check the Pope’s encyclopaedia… now I am having a fight. Can I just confess something? I’m having a fight with the Pope personally. And here’s what my fight is. Please take no offense, I know that there are many Catholic people… I’m not saying that you would think the way the Pope thinks. But the Pope thinks you’re supposed to think the way he thinks. In fact, he’s made several decrees regarding some things.

One of the things that the Pope has made me very mad about is this: In 2008, the Pope wrote a letter to all of his archbishops and big hats and said to them, “I have made a new ruling,” and his new ruling was this, in 2008. Now, I’m not going to give it all to you, but it’s in the book. Say, “book”.

Audience: Book.

Keith: He wrote a letter that says, as Pope, “I want you to know that there has been something that has crept inside of the church. People are beginning to speak and sing and pray the name of God.” And in 2008, the Pope wrote the letter, and I have it, somebody say, “in the book”.

Audience: In the book.

Keith: He says this. “This shall not be.” And I thought to myself, “Pope, what qualifies you to tell me that I can’t sing or pray to the One who is my Heavenly Father, who has a name?” [applause] The Pope doesn’t care about me, because he’s got millions of people that have bowed down to, whatever the Pope says, we do. So when I come out and say, as a result of information and inspiration we now have access to the name of God, he sends a letter saying, “There’s something that’s creeping into the church,” and he’s putting up a sign that says, “This shall not be.” But I’m here to tell the Pope something, and I hope he’s watching.

[laughter]

I’d rather follow the command of my Heavenly Father than even listen to your commands. And I know that we’re in an area right now where you all don’t get excited about that, so I’m just going to…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Woman: Yeah.

Keith: The Catholic encyclopaedia says this. “Belial is commonly used as a synonym of Satan.” Now, what the man is saying in this verse is that I’m hanging out with someone who is opposite of Mashiakh, who is Satan. Now, you all, I’m going to do something and this is going to cause such a stir, people are going to write. Michael’s going to get letters about this, but I did something radical. I went over to Jerusalem. And when I went over to Jerusalem, I found out something: Nehemia Gordon changes his appearance when he’s in the United States.

[laughter]

He messed up and let me come over to Jerusalem in the Old City. Come to find out when he’s over there, his head don’t look the same. He only shaves when he comes on tour with the Methodist, but I was able to snap a picture when he wasn’t looking. And here it is, right here. [laughter] Take it off, quick.

Now, let me tell you why I brought that picture. It was Nehemia’s idea. And what Nehemia said to me that really caught my attention, he said, “Keith, do you know there are some people, to this day, that think that Jews have horns?”

There are people… he says that his own father, Rabbi Gordon, actually had a person… Rabbi Gordon was wearing a hat. And as Rabbi Gordon was in Chicago, and may he live to be 120, as he was in Chicago, a man came up to him and said, “Rabbi, can I see your horns?” [laughter] And Rabbi Gordon says, “We’re not allowed to show them in public.” I think I know where Nehemia got that dry humor. Somebody say, “Rabbi.”

Audience: Rabbi.

Keith: Gordon.

Audience: Gordon.

Keith: Why did I show you the picture? Because this man thinks that as I’m out walking, and traveling, and speaking, and teaching, and praying, and living, and working with Nehemia Gordon, he’s calling my friend, Nehemia Gordon, “Satan”. And if the Catholic encyclopaedia is right, I’ve got to write him back and say, “You’re right.” But somebody say, “keep”.

Audience: Keep.

Keith: Reading.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: I did a radical thing, you all. I decided to check it for myself. And when I checked it for myself, I found something. I want to show you something, really quick. Belial becomes “Beliar” in the Greek Septuagint, that is the Greek Septuagint which is the translation of the Hebrew Torah and the Tanakh. So what do I want to do? I want to go and see if I can find this word “Beliar” in the Greek Septuagint. And by God’s grace, an amazing thing, I find it one time in the Greek Septuagint. Why do I want to do that? I want to find out, since it’s only used one time in the New Testament, is it used somewhere else? And sure enough, if I open up the Greek Septuagint, I find it here. “Now, therefore deliver us the men, the children of Beliar…” Say, “Beliar”.

Audience: Beliar.

Keith: “… which are in Gibeah, that we may put them to death, and put away evil from Israel.”

Why am I showing you this? Because now I want to do a really radical thing. If I know that Beliar is what they use in Greek, that means they originally looked at the Bible that Yeshua reads, and Paul is referring to the Hebrew. Say, “Hebrew”.

Audience: Hebrew.

Keith: And why do I want to look at the Hebrew? I want to look at the Hebrew and say, “How did they translate the Hebrew word into Beliar, which is only one-time used as Belial in the New Testament?” And then I found something that I’m going to try my best to stay calm on. [laughter]

If I go to the Hebrew Bible, I find these two words, “benei Bilya’al.” “benei Bilya’al,” 27 times, the word “Bilya’al” is used in the Tanakh, the Old Testament. Eight times, we find “benei Bilya’al” and every time we find the words “benei Bilya’al” we find an action with those people. This is the action we find in the eight times - and I guess I’m preaching to myself - that we find the eight times, “benei Bilya’al” we find it every single time, we find “benei Bilya’al”, these men are breaking Torah.

Audience: Oh!

Keith: Every time that I look at the eight times of “benei Bilya’al” they are breaking Torah. Now, Paul is doing a radical thing. Here’s what Paul’s doing. He’s building a case for why we don’t hang out with those that are not treating Torah the way Torah is to be treated.

Let me show you another verse, because you’re not convinced. Deuteronomy 13:13 says this, in the Hebrew, “Certain men, the benei Bilya’al,” say, “benei”.

Audience: Benei.

Keith: Bilya’al.

Audience: Bilya’al.

Keith: “Are gone out from among you and have withdrawn the inhabitants of their cities, saying these words. ‘Let us go and serve other gods which we have not known.’” Now, you all, if I hadn’t checked all eight times, and I’m not going to have time to go through all eight times because Nehemia eventually wants to speak, and I want him to speak. But Nehemia, when you come up to speak, leave your horns back there. [laughter]

I’m going to give you just one example, and now I’m going to do something that I’m going to even get in more trouble about. I decided to look at what I call an “expert Jewish commentator” on this verse. Now, the Methodists get real nervous now. “You’re going to look at a Jewish commentator?” Yeah, because you know what, Bishop? The Jewish commentator knows more about the Torah than you do. I go to the Jewish commentator, a very famous Jewish commentator, his name is Rashi. Say, “Rashi”.

Audience: Rashi.

Keith: I have it up on the line, it says here. “The sons of Bilial, it means ‘Bili Ol,’ ‘Without yoke,’ because they broke the yoke of the Omnipresent.” What does it mean, “Bilial?” “Those who break the yoke of Torah.” Look at your neighbor and say, “We’re getting there.” Oh, boy. Let’s …

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: “Or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?” The guy is telling me not only is Nehemia Satan, he’s also an infidel. If I keep it up there, we find two words, “pisto” and “apistou”. If you take those words, P-I-S-T-O, P-I-S-T-O, the apistou is just the same without, one is pisto and one is the apistou. Here’s what we find. “If you have not been faithful…” in Luke 16:12, “with what belongs to another, who will give you what is your own.” In other words, now we’re not just talking about some sort of theological thing up here. “Pisto”, “faith,” means action. How are you living? And that is exactly what we’re finding in here. But because my time is getting short, we need to…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: If we keep reading, we find this, what I call the translation by the King James Version, or by the man who said to me, “Look, Keith. You are unequally yoked. You are mis-mated,” and here’s the translation of 6:14 and 15. “Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers, for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? And what communion hath light with darkness? And what concord hath Christ with Satan, or Bilial? Or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?” If I just read the King James Version, I should not be hanging out with Nehemia Gordon, because I would be making an assumption that if I just simply read the King James Version, and the man hits me over the head with it, I’d feel guilty until I learned to…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: Now, I want to give you a radical translation I found of these two verses. You guys, promise me, you won’t tell anybody about this translation. [laughter] Can I show you a translation if I take the Hebrew, and I take the Greek, and I take the King James, and the NASV, and the nearly-inspired version? If I take all the versions together, here is a translation I’ve found. I’m telling you, man, I’m not going to tell you where it came from, initially. Let me give you a translation of those two verses. Here it is, on the screen. “Do not get hooked up with one who does not believe in Torah. For what can be gained between righteousness and Torah-lessness? Or what fellowship has the light of Torah with the darkness of this world? Or what partnership is there between Mashiakh, Messiah, and those not yoked to Torah? Or what connection is there between one who is faithful, and one who is unfaithful to Torah?”

[applause]

I’m not going to tell you where it came from. Put it back up on the screen, now. Put it back up on the screen. You guys, now listen, listen to me. Promise me you won’t say anything when I show you this. Everybody, promise me you’re going to be quiet. Here’s where this translation came from. [laughter] Somebody say, somebody say…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: Okay. I might as well keep reading, let’s keep reading. It says, “And what agreement hath the Temple of God… ” Now, you guys, Paul is doing something radical. He’s trying to teach us, he’s trying to help us. “And what agreement hath the Temple of God with idols?” You guys, there’s something happening here. “For ye are the Temple of the living God,” Paul says. And then he does a radical thing. He says this, and let’s just keep it up. You don’t need to picture me. “As God hath said.” Now, every time in the New Testament where I hear one of the writers say, “And God hath said,” I notice something interesting - and just bear with me while I’m moving. I’ve got to keep moving, because when I see, “And God has said,” that means that Paul is saying, “Open up your Tanakh.

Open up the oracles of God, because what I’m about to tell you, I didn’t say it. It wasn’t my opinion. I got it from the very book that Yeshua read, and that I call “all Scripture”. Now, for the radical thing. When Paul wrote this, there was no New Testament! I’m so glad for this side. These guys need help. Somebody say…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: If I keep reading, and I go to the place where he says, “And God hath said,” come on, now. It says this. “I shall dwell in them and walk in them and I shall be their God and they shall be My people.” Where did God say this? Oh, boy. That radical book, that Torah, that part that Yeshua loved, Leviticus chapter 26 where people said, “We ain’t got to do it no more.” You know, they said that every single thing under the Torah has been nailed to the cross. The blood has covered it. But in my denomination, there’s one command that the blood does not have power for. It is tithing. Why did you all get so quiet? Every other commandment in the Tanakh has been nailed to the cross. You ain’t under the Torah no more, but you better bring your tithes. Somebody say…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: I’m going to get kicked out for sure, this time. Then the amazing word that I love, but now, I’m almost done, Nehemia, is the word, somebody say it together…

Audience: Therefore.

Keith: Why do I love “therefore”? Because Paul is saying, “Everything I’ve said before, therefore means this.” And what do we have to do? We have to…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: “‘Therefore, come out from their midst and be separate,’ sayeth Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey. ‘And do not touch what is unclean and I will welcome you.’” Many people read the New Testament and say, “I’ll stay right there,” but Paul himself said, “I ain’t even got it for this. I’ve got to go to the Tanakh to get it.” And where did Paul get it? Ezekiel chapter 20 verses 34 and 41. But what have we got to do, because it’s almost the end of time?

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: “‘And I will be a Father to you, and you shall be sons and daughters to me,’ says Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, Almighty.” Where did that come from? 2 Samuel 7:14, 1 Chronicles 17:13. Now, for the last “therefore”. “Therefore…”

Audience: Therefore.

Keith: If you’re reading in your New Testament, something happened. You end up in chapter 7, rather than it being the end of chapter 6. And why did that happen? There was a man who was riding on his horse in around the 1600s and he decided, “I’ve got a good idea. I’m going to put verses in the New Testament.” And it says that as he was riding along on the horse, he would say, “12, oops, 1.” And what happens is, now that was supposed to be funny. [laughter] I must be almost into my time. The point is this. Man… Say, “man”.

Audience: Man.

Keith: Decided.

Audience: Decided.

Keith: To divide.

Audience: To divide.

Keith: The Bible.

Audience: The Bible.

Keith: And sometimes those decisions were made based on agenda. That is why on this day called Shabbat, which is to be the culmination, the major, most wonderful and radical climax of creation, where do we read about the seventh day? Chapter… chapter? You all ain’t with me. Look at your Bibles. We’ll talk about it later. But there’s an agenda. Instead of it being the seventh day, they put it at the beginning of the first, to try to make it the first day, so that when Sunday came, they said it’s not Shabbat. But that’s another topic.

Today is Shabbat. God has separated it and made it holy. It’s something that He has done, and man, every once in a while, gets their fingers in, and in this particular situation, what man had done is, he said, “Hey, look. I think 7 should be 7, because I don’t want people to realize therefore.” So what he did is, let’s start a new chapter. Instead of finishing chapter 6, he said, “Chapter 7.” And what do we find with chapter 7? This “Therefore, having these promises…” and I’m almost done, beloved, “let us cleanse ourselves from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God,” that is 2 Corinthians 7:1.

And now, for my testimony and ending. About 21 days ago, I found myself at A Rood Awakening. And I want to confess something you, and I’m getting personal now, but the world’s going to find out. I was struggling in my body. Stress was on me. There were issues taking over me. I was feeling a certain level of just sluggishness, and I show up at Michael Rood’s ministry, A Rood Awakening, and I meet two people, Dr. Tunsky and April Renee. And when I met them, they were talking and proclaiming about this issue, that it’s not good enough to have the spiritual without the physical, that you must address both. And I did the most radical thing. I asked them if I could meet with them, and they said to me this. “Well, Keith. Here’s what we could do. We could actually take you to a detox.” Say, “detox”.

Audience: Detox.

Keith: “Now, this detox is going to be about 21 days.” And I’m thinking, “21 days? I want to be on the road 21 days? Are you kidding me?” But for the first 10 days, all I did for 10 days is only drink live food, and all of a sudden, at about day 8 and day 9, my eyes started opening. My ears began to perk. My heart began to soften. And for the next 11 days, I would eat and I would think and I would pray. And guess what? Yesterday happened to be Yom Teruah - and my birthday - and it was the 21st day of the detox.

So today when I’m telling you, “Therefore”, come on with the screen, “having these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves both physically and spiritually.” [applause] Now, you all have gotten real quiet in the house. Some of you want to say, “I am the Temple of the living God. Give me some more pig.”

Audience: No!

Keith: “I am the Temple of the living God. Where is the sugar? I’m the Temple of the living God, I eat what I want, when I want, at any time I want. But God, I praise you.” Let me tell you something. We’d better get ready for what’s coming, and what’s coming is going to mean you’re going to have to be physically, emotionally - come on, somebody - spiritually ready for what is coming. And I’m so glad that there’s a ministry that would say, “We’re not afraid to not only address spirit and mind, but we also will address body.” Now, you all that was the quietest you’ve been all the time, so let’s…

Audience: Keep.

Audience: Reading.

Keith: Here’s my end. I was at this place, two weeks after Mubarak was kicked out. Nehemia Gordon, the unbelieving Jew that they said I should not hang out with, said, “Keith, I’m not going to let you go to Egypt by yourself. I will go with you.” I have been around many teachers, Christian, Messianic, Jewish and everywhere else, but for some reason, they believe God until it gets dangerous. Then, they don’t want to believe God. But my unbelieving Jewish friend says, “I don’t care if it’s that, because if you say God wants you there, we’re in the safest place we can be.”

Man: Amen! [applause]

Keith: We went into Egypt, and as we went into Egypt a radical thing happened. Nehemia said, “Listen, I’ve been here before. I’ve had an amazing thing.” I talked about it before, you can get it on the video. I’m not going to give you all the testimony, but I’ve brought this for this reason. As we got to Egypt, we got to the base of the mountain, which is not the real mountain. Say, “real mountain”.

Audience: Real mountain.

Keith: But it looks good. It’s the middle of the night. As we get to the middle of the night, to the base of the mountain, they say, “You’ve got two choices. You can walk up the mountain, or you could hire a camel.” Now, Nehemia says, “I think we should walk.” However, what he didn’t say, and of course, it had already been determined, that his neck was hurting and he could not carry the bag that both of our stuff was in. So he said, “Keith, you carry the bag.” Look at your neighbor and say, “Keith, he might be a Methodist, but he ain’t a dummy.” [laughter] Somebody say, “Hire a camel.”

Audience: Hire a camel.

Keith: So we hired a camel. We hired two camels. And this man, which I want to show you a picture of, real quick, did a radical thing. He yoked one camel to the other camel. And in the middle of the night, as we were yoked together to the top of the mountain, there were some times when Nehemia’s camel was leading me. And Nehemia would be like, “Oh, oh, it’s dark!” [laughter] And there were other times when my camel would be walking side-by-side with Nehemia’s. And sometimes - and I’m so glad about sometimes - Nehemia had to follow me. [laughter] But here’s why I brought it. I’m yoked together with a man who loves Torah.

Audience: Amen! [applause]

Keith: Now, in closing, I want to show you a picture, and to do something very special. This picture is the picture from the top of Mount Sinai. And the reason I showed you that picture is because it’s not just a photo op. God has called me as a Gentile to hook up with a Jew, and I have reason to believe it’s prophetic. What is the application? “Blessed is the man. Blessed is the man who grabs a hold, keeps a hold, and walks Torah.” Andrew, come and sing this song.

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When the Going Gets Tough – Keith Johnson (Open Door Series – Part 10)

Keith Johnson speaks about "When the Going Gets Tough" in the Open Door Series Part 10

Transcript

When the Going Gets Tough - Keith Johnson (Open Door Series - Part 10)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Keith: I’m going to ask you to roll up your sleeves. If you’re real, real comfortable, I’m going to ask you to get a little uncomfortable, because I’m about to share something with you that will be just a little bit tough. And if that’s all right, say amen.

Audience: Amen.

Keith: And if that’s not, you can leave. [laughter] But the reason I need to share this with you is because it is something that has certainly changed my life, and is changing people’s lives around the world. I’m so glad Nehemia talked about our book, A Prayer to Our Father: The Hebrew Origins of the Lord’s Prayer, because it is changing not only our lives, but the lives of people around the world. But one of the reasons it’s so radical is that we’re actually saying that we have an opportunity to taste, to smell, to feel that which was originally spoken by the one named “Yeshua”, or “Yehoshua”. Why is that so important? Because I think most of the people here would say they would love to be able to understand His words in the original language, history, and context. However, let me tell you something. His words in the original language, history, and context are tough. Say, “tough”.

Audience: Tough.

Keith: Now, if you’re still willing to hear His language, even though it’s tough, just raise your hand. Put it down. The second more important question is, if we were able to confirm that His language is tough, would you ever be willing to do it? You see, what I’m concerned about is, I come from a tradition where we don’t spend as much time in that which is original, we spend more time in that which has been presented to us. And I have to say something. That which has been presented to us doesn’t always call us to what is tough. Say, “tough”.

Audience: Tough.

Keith: When I read this particular passage that I’m going to share with you from the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew, it will cause you to understand a little bit better what I call the perspective of just who our Father is, and who the one whom we call Yeshua, what it is that He actually came to do.

The copy of the book I have up on the screen, and one of the things I love about this is that we never intended to write a book. All Nehemia Gordon and I did was study the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew together. When I introduced myself to him and he accepted my friendship, he finally came back to me and he said, “Listen, Keith. I only have two rules. The first rule is, you don’t try to convert me, and I don’t try to convert you.” And I said, “No problem.” The second rule was, “We’re only going to study the Tanakh, the Hebrew Bible. None of that New Testament stuff. None of that Jesus stuff.” [laughter]

Six or seven years later, I get a phone call and it’s Nehemia Gordon, who still had had the door shut, so he was speaking in the Litvak Jew sort of voice. “Keith, this is Nehemia.” “Yeah, Nehemia. What’s goin’ on?” “I’d like to suspend one of the rules.” [laughter] “Are you kidding me? Which one of the rules do you want to suspend? Conversion or New Testament? Either way, I win.” [laughter and applause] And he said in his Litvak Jew sort of voice, he said, “I’d like to study the New Testament with you.” And I put the phone down and said, “Yes, Nehemia. I’d be glad to do that.”

After I got off the phone I shouted, and I said, “Father, You are about to do something powerful amongst Your people. You are going to connect the Methodist with a Karaite Jew who’s studied the Tanakh, the very Bible that Yeshua read. Now we’re going to take the system of study that we’ve put in place over years and years and years and we’re going to incorporate that study in the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew.” [applause]

Now, I have to tell you something that I mentioned to Michael this morning. We have not even begun to share the treasures that have been found in the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew. There are so many things that jump off the page, out of the book, that would knock a Karaite Jew down and put a Methodist slain in the spirit. [laughter] And one of the things that I’ve decided to do at Yom Teruah, the weekend, is to bring forward for you further revelation from the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew. [applause] I will tell you something. This morning was important for me because we were teaching in terms of responding to not only the man that sent the letter to me on 2 Corinthians chapter 6, but many of my Methodist brothers and sisters, and many of my other brothers and sisters that are saying, “What are you doing hanging out with this guy?”

Now, what I’m going to do is give you just a little application from the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew, but you need to pray for me for tomorrow. You need to truly pray for me for tomorrow, because tomorrow, if the Father will allow it, I will share something with you that can bless you at the very core of your being.

However, I am convinced that if I make it through tomorrow, and we get to that session, it will probably not go over so well with the religious police. [laughter] But I’ve learned something about the religious police. Their secondary Hebrew term name is the Hounds of Hell, and they yell and they scream and they shout and they lift up their badges that do not have authority, because I will tell you something. I would rather be in the midst of the One who gives true authority than to fall prey to those who have false authority. [applause]

Now, back to what’s going to happen tonight. Have you rolled up your sleeves? I want to share with you something that’s out of the prayer that Nehemia and I taught, based on the Hebrew origins of the Lord’s Prayer. There’s a line in the prayer, and what Nehemia and I actually did is, we went to Israel, he came to the United States, we went back and forth with each other. We spent days, hours, weeks, months studying the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew in Hebrew, in Greek, in English, in Aramaic, in any other thing you can imagine. When we came to this particular section, we realized something very important. It was not good enough for he and I to keep this to ourselves. We had to share it with others, so we took all of our study and just went to one prayer. And I will tell you something, we have only scratched the surface of this prayer. The first phrase of the prayer is Avinu. Say, “Avinu”.

Audience: Avinu.

Keith: Our Father. And my friend, the Litvak Jew, when we sat down to study, you know, we sat down to study together, we were in Charlotte. We had about four computers with us, all sorts of books, all sorts of Greek, he had German and English, and everything. We had all sorts, I mean, things you just could not imagine. Nehemia says to me in the beginning, he says, “Listen, this first phrase, Avinu, Our Father, you just do that. That doesn’t apply to me, as the Jewish person. You know, I mean, our Father, you guys call Him Father, you’ve got the Son. Hey, we don’t call him ‘Father’ until…” Say, “until”.

Audience: Until.

Keith: …we opened up the book that Yeshua read. And guess what we found, over, and over, and over, He is called “Father” even for the Jew. [applause]

The second phrase, “Yitkadesh shimkha”, say, “Yitkadesh”.

Audience: Yitkadesh.

Keith: Shimkha.

Audience: Shimkha.

Keith: Your name be sanctified, a call to action. This put me into a situation where I was literally arrested for over a year, after we came out with this book. We went out to try to just simply teach the prayer, and every single time, I would get stuck on Yitkadesh Shimkha, because I knew that that phrase, unlike the poetic term, “Hallowed be Thy name,” “Yitkadesh Shimkha” is a call to action.

How could I be teaching people this particular prayer if I did not want to move into action regarding His name? So what I did was for about a month-and-a-half, I was fasting, and praying, and I literally was arrested in my place, in my home, studying again all of the time that I had spent with my friend, Nehemia Gordon, learning about the name that my Jewish brothers and sisters said were too holy to pronounce, too powerful to handle, too profound to understand. Therefore, I was prohibited from speaking it, but my Jewish friend, Nehemia Gordon, who reads the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Hebrew manuscripts, the Aleppo, the Leningrad, like I read the USA Today, he chose to give me the key to the treasure.

And when he gave me the key to the treasure, it was not good enough for me to keep this little flame for me and my friend. What I was called to was to make that information available to the world. And over the next year, 500 people from around the world, including our friend Andrew Hodkinson, received the study, went over the study. I even have study partners here in New Mexico, who had the study and they would make comments. And they would say, “What about this, and what about that, and what about this, and what about that?” They then sent it back to me, I went and changed everything based on the Scriptures. Then after that, I handed it to my Hebrew scholar, Nehemia Gordon from the Hebrew University, and he messed up and said this. I don’t know if he had wine. I don’t know if he was tired. [laughter] I don’t know why he said it, but he said to me, “Keith, this is a magnificent masterpiece.”

Audience: [laughter]

Keith: And because it already came out of his mouth, he tried to get it and put it back in, but somebody say, “He already said it!”

Audience: He already said it.

Keith: Then he messed around, and travelled with me to South Africa. Boy, I’m going to tell you something. I’ve got to tell this story. We went to South Africa, and as we were in South Africa, Nehemia got sick. Say, “sick”.

Audience: Sick.

Keith: When Nehemia got sick, I took advantage of the opportunity to go out by myself. And my friend, Andrew Hodkinson, took me to a place where there were Zulu warriors. You may have heard about it before, but the end result was simply this. As I was amongst these Zulu warriors, and they were singing and they were dancing, they shouted out three Hebrew words. And those three Hebrew words, I’ve got to believe somebody in the distant past must have learned these three Hebrew words and shared it with the next person, and shared it with the next generation, and the next generation.

So when I’m there with Andrew Hodkinson, and after the end of the singing and the dancing, they give these three Hebrew words in this order. “Amen! Hallelu! Yah.” Now, let me tell you why this is a big deal, and I ain’t got a slide for it, so just bear with me.

When they said, “Amen! Hallelu! Yah!” in that order, it only shows up one time in the Bible that Yeshua read. These Zulu brothers and sisters had the shortened, poetic form of God’s name in their generation, in the exact order of the Psalms. Somebody say, “There must be people all over the world that have been scattered. And yet, they still are yearning to call upon the name of our Creator!” Amen?

Audience: Woo-hoo. [applause]

Keith: Oh, my goodness. So Yitkadesh Shimkha, that one phrase caused me to write 226 pages, 80 different descriptions in Hebrew in the back of the book, 616 verses that make up the book. And I will tell you something that most people don’t know - in the back of the book, there’s a bonus section on what about the name Jesus? Oh, you’d better get it. [laughter]

Now, for the presentation. As we’re going over this prayer, we made a radical decision. What if we actually went to the places where the prayer was actually created? So I went over to Israel, and the first thing we did is we went down in the basement and looked at the Hebrew manuscripts that were based on manuscripts. You all, I’m going to talk a little bit more about it tomorrow, but it is amazing what my friend Nehemia was able to share with me so that we can share it with you.

This is information that the Greek scholars cannot read, and the Hebrew scholars do not care about. But God called a Litvak to hook up with a Methodist so that you could be blessed today. [applause]

Now, there’s a line in the prayer that I’m going to simply share with you tonight in the spirit of what I believe is happening around the world. I have a picture up here that I would like you to take a look at. This picture is called The Wilderness. Say, “wilderness”.

Audience: Wilderness.

Keith: Nehemia and I did a radical thing. We actually went out into the wilderness to see if we could experience what it would be like for Yeshua, or in my tradition whom they would call Jesus, what it would be like for Him during the time of what I learned to be the Temptation. So Nehemia and I went out there, and Nehemia warned me, he said, “Keith, now listen. Out here, it’s very, very dry. It’s the kind of thing where you’re going to need to bring plenty of water.” And I said, “Hey, listen. I used to be with the Vikings. I’m in shape. I’m still in shape today, I’m fine. Let me just have my one bottle of water.” Until about two-and-a-half hours in the desert, and I’m so glad that Nehemia was willing to share with me his water. Here is a picture of us. That’s Nehemia before he went on the 40-day fast in the wilderness. [laughter] That’s me after I actually have some water. And the reason that we’re there, we’re there trying to experience the situation that Yeshua was in.

And as we were there, there were things, you all, that happened that were just radical. Now, I’m going to share with you right now some of this. There’s a word, if you open up your Bibles into Matthew chapter 6, the normal statement is this. “Lead us not into temptation.” Say, “temptation”.

Audience: Temptation.

Keith: The idea being that Yeshua is teaching the people that there is this idea of temptation, and that He’s going to his Father and saying, “Father, please don’t lead us into temptation.” Now, that’s fine if we want to stay right there, but we learned this morning this really radical idea to…

Audience: Keep reading.

Keith: …keep reading. So what do I want to read? I want to go to the Greek, and I want to understand what the Greek says. So if I put up here, “Lead us not into temptation,” I find that that is the word “parasmon”. Say, “parasmon”.

Audience: Parasmon.

Keith: Now, if I see the Greek “parasmon” and I see the English “temptation”, I’m still trying to find out what was the actual word that Yeshua used? Here’s what I’ve done. Here’s the prayer, right here. I’m going to share it with you, but one of the things I love about this, this particular prayer is in the font of the 1st century. In other words, that if Yeshua was walking in the 1st century and, I don’t know, there might be a story like this, where maybe someone has him kneel down and write in the sand, if he was writing in Hebrew, you’re actually looking at the actual Hebrew letters in the way he would write them in the 1st century. And how do we know this? Because of the Dead Sea Scrolls, where we actually have scrolls where we’re writing actually in this font. This is important, because in this particular prayer, there’s a line that kind of rocks my world regarding the issue of temptation. It says, “Do not bring us into the hands of a test.” Can you say, “test”?

Audience: Test.

Keith: Now, if I find out what that word means in the Bible that Yeshua reads, I find this word. It is the word “nisa”, say, “nisa”.

Audience: Nisa.

Keith: Okay, why is this important, you all? Because again, what we want to do is, we want to go back in time. We want to try to get an idea of the language, history, and context of this particular prayer. There’s a word that he uses in the prayer that is connected to the word “nisa”, and I’m going to actually share with you this phrase. I cannot take the time to share the entire prayer with you, but I want to share this with you. I want you to say, “ve’al”.

Audience: Ve’al.

Keith: Ve’al.

Audience: Ve’al.

Keith: Tevieynu.

Audience: Tevieynu.

Keith: Lidei.

Audience: Lidei.

Keith: Nisayon.

Audience: Nisayon.

Keith: Which means, not simply, “Lead us not into temptation.” Yeshua is looking up at his heavenly Father and he’s saying, “Do not bring us…” say, “us”.

Audience: Us.

Keith: “…into the hands of a test.” You all, I’m going to tell you, this is exciting to me. Why is it exciting to me? Because if I open up my Torah scroll that I received in the Land of Israel, and I get to the section that is read around the world during the time of Yom Teruah in Jewish synagogues around the world, they will open up their Torah scroll, and if I was there, I would raise my hand and I would say, “Can I read this section? I’m about to speak to a whole bunch of folks in New Mexico during the time of Yom Teruah,” and they would say, “Yes, come,” hopefully. And if I were to open and to read all around the world in the second day of their reading - because they do two days, the first day they read one section, the second day they read a second section. And I have to stop and say, thank you to our friend, Ira in Florida, Rabbi Ira, who actually shared this with me. He actually did the dance in his room. He also is the one who has decided to incorporate the name Yehovah into the singing and the chanting of the Priestly Benediction. [applause]

He finds this and he says, “Keith, you’ve got to tell the people this, that all over the world, people are unrolling the scroll, and this is what they’re seeing.” I’m going to show you a picture. This is the scroll, that’s my scroll right there that I have in my house. I love to be able to open it and read it for myself, so I can see what it says.

But this is what they would read in the synagogue. “Now, it came about after these things that God tested Abraham and said to him, ‘Abraham…’” and he said three words that I wish my Church denomination would learn to say, “Here I am.” Now, leave the screen up there for just a second.

If I open my scroll, I find out that now it came about after these things that God nisa Abraham and said to him, “Abraham,” and He said still, “Here I am.” So what’s the connection? “Then Jesus was led up into the Spirit, into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.” That is what it says in the King James Version. If I open up the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew, if you’ll keep the screen, here is what it says. “Then Yeshua was led up of the Ruakh Hakodesh into the desert to be nisa by haSatan.” Do you see the difference? Lead us not into temptation. Do not bring us into the hands of a test.

Now’s where it gets exciting. When the going gets tough, what do the tough do?

Audience: Get going.

Keith: When the going gets tough, what do the tough do? I’m going to tell you what I’m going to do. First thing they do is they roll up their sleeves. And I think one of the things that we can do tonight is this; let’s see what the tough one named Yeshua did when the going got tough. Let’s use Yeshua to see what he does when the going gets tough.

There are three universal tests, I like to say this. There are three universal tests, and the first test that we’re going to talk about is exactly the test that haSatan, the devil, used against the one named Yeshua. Now, what I like about right now is you all are getting real quiet. I sense that some of you in this house have gone, or are going presently through a test. If I were to have you raise your hands, and I won’t, I would guarantee you that there are some of you that are presently in a test, and I will guarantee you that most of you will take the route of that test back to one of these universal tests. The first one, somebody say, “provision”.

Audience: Provision.

Keith: You know what I’m talking about. Can I get an amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: Let me make it easier for you. For me, this is a real test. Father, where are you at when the provision is scarce? And I know, probably here in New Mexico, you guys don’t have financial issues. [laughter] I’m sure some of you are thinking, “What are you talking about? I’ve got all the money I need. I’ve got all the finance. I’ve got all the situation.” But are there one or two people that would understand the issue of the test regarding provision? Here’s what happened. “When he had fasted 40 days, say, ‘40 days…’”

Audience: 40 days.

Keith: “…and 40 nights, He was afterward,” and I’m using the King James Version, “He was hungry.” Makes sense. And then it says, “And when the tempter came to Him, He said…” now, I think this is interesting, if I could stop for a moment. Yeshua was hungry. And it’s interesting - the tester didn’t come to him in day one. The tester didn’t come to him in week one. The tester waited until the end of the 40 days… it seems like the tester almost knows where the potential weakness would be.

You know, that’s why we get quiet sometimes, because with you, some of you that are here, he waits until you are weak and then he comes to you and says, “Take care of it yourself.” And when the tempter came to him he said, “If thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread. But He answered…” [laughing] this is Yeshua, it says, “but He answered the tester with three simple words. ‘It is written.’”

Audience: It is written.

Keith: When the going gets tough, the tough get to the word. Is anyone tougher than Yeshua? I’ve met some tough people. The rabbi last week, Ira - tough. Nehemia Gordon on the camel - not so tough. [laughter] But when I read about the one whom they call Yeshua, is there anyone that you’ve read about that is more tough?

And yet, in the midst of the tempter, tester, the actual introduction of the test, he says these three words that I wish my Methodist brothers and sisters, and my Messianic brothers and sisters, and my Baptist - come on somebody - brothers and sisters, and my Catholic brothers and sisters, and all the denominations, and all the Jewish synagogues around the world, would learn to say what Yeshua said. “When the going gets tough,” the tough get to the word, “It is written.”

Audience: It is written.

Keith: And then he does something. Now, you all, I can’t help it. I’m sorry, I just have to do this. Can I open up the Bible that he read? “For He said, ‘It is written.’” Now, if he said, “It is written,” something interesting happens. I’m going to open up this Bible and I’m going to go to the section that Yeshua pulled out the “it is written” from. What I’m holding here is the Hebrew Bible. Of course, his was not leather-bound. He would read scrolls. What this represents is the oldest, most complete Hebrew Bible in the world, called the Aleppo Codex, which also has the Leningrad Codex, which is the oldest, most complete vocalized Hebrew Bible in the world, which is based on your English Old Testament. So we’ve got two witnesses, say, “two”.

Audience: Two.

Keith: If I open up this Bible, here’s what I would see. It says here, in I think Deuteronomy chapter 8, you mean Yeshua quoted from the Torah? That seems radical. “All the commandments which I command you this day, you should be careful to do, in order that you might live and you might increase, and you might enter, and you might possess the land which…” oh, my goodness, “Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey,” oh, my goodness. I have to say it, if it’s all right with you. Or maybe I should just say, “Lord”. But since I’m reading from the Hebrew Bible, I’d better say it the way we find it in the Aleppo Codex. It says, “which Yehovah has sworn to your fathers, you shall remember all of the ways in which Yehovah has led you this 40 years.”

Yeshua is about to do something radical. He’s reading in Deuteronomy chapter 8 this context. And from this context he pulls out his response to the tester. 40 years, 40 days. And it says, “40 days in the desert, in order to afflict you,” oh, my goodness, “and to test you,” and I love this part, “to know what is in your heart.” Oh, somebody’s going through a test. Somebody’s dealing with a test of provision, and Daddy knows all about it. But sometimes, say, “sometimes”.

Audience: Sometimes.

Keith: He’ll use the test to find out what is in your heart, “to see whether or not you will keep His commandments or not. You were afflicted. You were hungry, and He fed you with manna.” Say, “manna…”

Audience: Manna.

Keith: “…which you did not know, and your fathers did not know, in order that you might know.” And then it says this, if I could just change this here. I need to bring it to you just the way he said it to the tempter, or the tester. Deuteronomy chapter 8 verse 3, you all know what it says there in English. What he does, he does not speak English. So I’m imagining something. He’s there and he’s remembering in Deuteronomy chapter 8 from his Bible, and not to be overly dramatic, but I want you to imagine that it’s 40 days, and 40 nights, and he’s tired. The Bible said, “He was hungry,” and I can hear him in my mind, in the wilderness, because I’ve been there. I can imagine him standing before the one who is the tester. And I hear him with sort of a raspy voice maybe saying, “Ki lo al halekhem levado ikhiyeh ha’adam ki al…” and I can hear his voice getting louder for this section, “ki al kol motza pi…” and does he stop and say, “Should I say ‘Hashem?” Does he stop and say, “Well, the rabbis say, maybe I should say Adonai?” Or does he say what he read in the Bible that he understood?

I think his voice started out, “Ki lo al halekhem levado ikhiyeh ha’adam…” and then, I could hear him say, “ki al kol motza pi Yehovah ikhiyeh ha’adam.” “A man does not live by bread alone, but from every word that proceeds from the mouth of My Daddy who has a name.”

Test number one - provision. Why does he bring this out? Because he understands something. Even Satan, haSatan, knew something about the book. Can I get an amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: In fact, I’ll go so far to say that haSatan knows more about the Hebrew Bible than my bishop. And I don’t mind saying that, because I love everybody that I’m connected to, but I also will continue to challenge everybody I’m connected to, to get back to this.

Test number two - this is one that’s probably a little more difficult. I call this test, the test of pride. Say, “pride”.

Audience: Pride.

Keith: The first one, provision, dealing with our need, our physical need. And of course, haSatan coming to Yeshua saying, “Hey, do something about it yourself.” And some of you have heard that. God has forgotten you. Do something about provision yourself. Turn that which you are not to turn into something that you need. And this is the problem presently in the Church, and may I even go so far, even in the synagogue. Maybe we get impatient with the fact that what we need we don’t have now, so we rely on ourselves for our own provision. But because you all are so quiet, let’s move to pride.

“Then the devil took Him…” oh, I love this. Now, wait a minute. He just whooped you with the word. “Then the devil took Him?” Wait a minute. You mean to say the devil has patience? You mean to say, the devil has perseverance? You mean to say, even after he heard a “no”, he kept knocking at the door? “Then the devil took Him into the Holy City and had Him stand on the pinnacle of the Temple and said to Him, ‘If You are the Son of God, throw yourself down, for Satan himself said, For it is written.’”

You mean to tell me he knows what is written? “He will command his angels concerning You, and on their hands they will bear You up so that You will not strike Your foot against a stone.” Problem - the devil takes Scripture out of context. You all can relax now. “For it is written, ‘He will command His angels concerning You and on their hands they will bear you up so that You will not strike Your foot against a stone.’”

If I open up the Bible Yeshua read, I would say, “For He will give His angels charge concerning You, to guard You in all Your ways. They will bear You up in their hands that You do not strike Your foot against a stone.”

Now, let’s do this wonderful thing that I wish more people do, and that is to keep reading. You cannot build a denomination off a verse, though there are many that have.

Can I say it again? Come on Arthur Bailey. Bishop, can you tell me something, apostle? So are there not denominations, I think they say there are like 30,000 denominations, and many of those denominations will pick one verse and say, “We stand on the word of God without context, but we stand on it. And if we want to bring the entire context, we’re not interested in that, because we’re just like haSatan, when it’s time to prove what we want to prove, we’ll do with Scripture anything we want to do with Scripture.”

When will we learn that when He gave His word, He gave it in context? Oh, I wish I had somebody in here. “No evil will befall you.” Now, because I think Yeshua understood context, “nor will any plague come near your tent. You will tread upon the lion and the cobra. The young lion…” I wonder if he realized this, “The young lion and the serpent, You will trample down.” And then, here comes old Satan, pulling out of this particular passage his verse, to try to prove what it is that he’s telling Yeshua to do. “Yeshua, if you’re the Son of God, God must really need You. I’ll tell you what we’re going to do. We’re going to go to the highest point of the Temple,” which just happens to be the place where under it would have been the Holy of Holies. He’s standing up on the Temple, and he’s saying to him, “You are some bad dude. You are tough, Yeshua. You are amazing. God must really need You right now. I think You could act the fool. Throw Yourself down, and because You’re so important in the religious movement that’s taking place, God will charge His angels to help fix your mess.”

Sounds… somebody say, “familiar”.

Audience: Familiar.

Keith: Oh, there are so many religious leaders that the Father will allow to grow so far, and then they’ll get on top of the Temple. You know, the TV ratings are good. Come on, somebody. You know, they got plenty of tithes and plenty of offerings, and they’re flying in planes, and riding on trains. And they have two or three automobiles, and they’re thinking, “You know what? I have got the shizzle. I am somebody. I can act the fool. I can throw myself down.” And they’re listening to Satan, and they’re thinking that they’re so important to God that they can make a Scripture that does not even mean what it means. And so they throw themselves down, act the fool and say, “God, bless this mess.” And you know what? It is exactly what is taking place today.

Woman: Yes.

Keith: He takes it out of context. They apply it into their lives, but if we continue reading, it says this. “Because He has loved Me, therefore I will deliver Him. I will set Him securely on high.” Not on high of your religious movement. I’ll set him securely on high where I want him to be, “because He has known My name. He will call upon Me, and I will answer Him. I will be with Him in trouble…” Say, “trouble”.

Audience: Trouble.

Keith: “I will rescue him and honor him with a long life. I will satisfy him and let him see My salvation.” That is the context of the proof text. I’m not so sure that Satan should’ve used that proof text, because Yeshua did something. In my King James Bible it says, “Jesus said to him, ‘On the other hand, it is written…’”

Audience: It is written.

Keith: Now, you all, I have to do something again. Can I open up the Bible? And if I’m thinking right, “He would be again…” in sync with Deuteronomy. And I think this time, he would be in Deuteronomy, oh, I think it would be around verse 13. In English it says, “You shall not put the Lord, your God, to the test.” Now, I love this. In verse 16, yes, it’s 16 - I’m not as good on the memorization of the Hebrew Bible as Yeshua. You didn’t get that. In Hebrew, he would say to haSatan, and at this point, he’s probably now on top of the Temple, as it says, and maybe he can kind of feel something - maybe the leftovers of what it was like when the Ark of the Covenant used to be in the Temple, because you know that by the time that Satan took him to the top of the Temple, there was no Ark of the Covenant, which is called by the name, in the Holy of Holies, but it was still considered the Holy of Holies by many people.

And so Satan has got him up there, and I can imagine him maybe feeling, “This is a very holy place that I’m at.” And then he says, in Hebrew, maybe feeling a little better, “Lo tenasu et Yehovah Eloheikhem.” What does that mean? He stopped in the middle of the verse. According to my English Bible, he stopped in the middle of the verse. But in the Hebrew Bible, he had to have known the second phrase of the verse. It says, “Lo tenasu et Yehovah Eloheikhem ka’asher nisitem bamasa.” Can I show you what it says?

Deuteronomy 6:16, you see three words, “tenasu”, say that.

Audience: Tenasu.

Keith: Say, “nisitem”.

Audience: Nisitem.

Keith: Say, “bamasa”.

Audience: Bamasa.

Keith: Why did Yeshua pick this response to the tester? Because three times in this verse is the word “nisa”, “test”. “You shall not test Yehovah, your God, as when you tested Him at tests.” What are you talking about, at tests? It doesn’t say, “at tests”. Well, if you read the Bible in its original language, history, and context, you find out that the place “masa” which was actually named by Moshe, was called “nisa bamasa,” is test. Say, “test”.

Audience: Test.

Keith: Yeshua is picking a verse to remind himself three times, three different tests. This is test, this is test, this is test, this is test, this is test. And you all, I wish you’d learn to be able to say this, “This is test.” This is test. Somebody say it - “this is test”.

Audience: This is test.

Keith: This is test.

Audience: This is test.

Keith: And we want to pass the test. Third verse, third test. First of all, provision. Second of all, pride. But I have to tell you, the third one is probably the most controversial. I’m sure some of you that are here will probably guess what the third one is. Provision, we kind of understand. Pride, we can put that off on the religious leaders. But this one, we call “power”. And there are people here that are struggling in this area of this test. Here’s what Satan does. Again, say, “again...”

Audience: Again.

Keith: “The devil took Him to a very high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory.” Now, remember something. Before we go any further, when the going gets tough, the tough get to the word. I said, when the going gets tough, the tough…

Audience: Get to the word.

Keith: Why? Because the real power is in the word. HaSatan comes and he shows him all of this stuff. And all of these things he says, “I shall give You.” Now, I’ve got to stop here for a second, because there’s something I want to tell people that have fallen into the failure of this test. He will promise you the world, but I’ve got to tell you a secret. Every time he speaks, he lies. I said, every time he speaks, he lies. And he’s been whispering to some men in this place, telling some men in this place, “I’ll give it to you, if you do it my way.” But I’ve got to tell you something, men. He lies. Oh, there’s women in this place where he’s whispered in your ear, “If you just do it this way, I will…” and you need to know something, women - every time he speaks, he lies.

Oh, the real tough people are going to want to understand what it says in the word of God. He said, “All of these things, I will give you if you fall down and worship me.” Can I open Hebrew Matthew for a second? Is it all right with you?

Now, understand something. Hebrew Matthew is not popular with the Aramaic folks. I don’t know if you know it or not, but there’s an official Aramaic Bible of the Messianic movement. And they have decided the witness of the Hebrew doesn’t match the Aramaic, and so they don’t so much want you to learn the Hebrew, because then you might decide that you want to do what Nehemia and I have done. We want to compare the Hebrew, the Greek, the Aramaic, the English, the versions. We want all of the witnesses, but the Aramaic people are saying, “No, there’s only one witness.” That, to me, is a problem, especially since the reason you don’t want anyone to look at the Hebrew is because the Aramaic is $59.95. It’s about power. It’s about money. It’s about the wrong things. They have been whispered in their ear from haSatan, that has said, “It is more important for you to have the power than to give the people the option to know the truth.”

I don’t mind saying it. You know why I don’t mind saying it? Because they already came at me, and they asked me, “If you bow down to the Aramaic, we’ll keep you on television.”

Audience: Oh!

Keith: It is written. [applause] Hello, somebody. Here’s what it says in Hebrew Matthew, and if I can make it to tomorrow, Father, would you let me live till tomorrow, so I can give these people this information? [laughter]

I’m not laughing. I’m dead serious. Would you let me live till tomorrow, to give these people this information? But before that, can I share what it says in Hebrew Matthew?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: It says this. “If you bare Your head to me.” Satan says, “Look, all I need to see is Your bald head.” And how will You bare Your head to me? By going like this. That’s all he wants. That’s all he wants. Don’t keep erect. Don’t keep your head up, even though provision is funny. Keep your head up when pride ain’t around. Keep your head up when they’re trying to offer you power that ain’t real power. Keep your head up. I will not bare my bald head to you. [laughter]

Oh, I wish there were more people. Tyler, do me a favor, Tyler. You know, earlier today, for the television cameras, for the television cameras, I saw Tyler do something I’ve never seen him do. My friend, Andrew, was up here singing, and he was singing, and Tyler thought, “What a great shot. This is a great TV shot.” Tyler leapt behind his computer and ran down to the front saying, “Rise, get up. Come on, you’re on TV.” You all, don’t you know I’m talking about something that’s better than TV right now? Do you know what we’re talking about is having an opportunity to respond, to have an encounter with the very words of Yeshua? Yeshua himself said, “Father, ve’al tevieynu lidei nisayon.” “Do not bring us into the hands of a test.” But if You do, when the going gets tough, the tough…

Audience: Get to the word.

Keith: You all don’t even get excited. Boy, I wish I was in a Methodist church right now. Oh, I miss the Methodist church right now, because you know, I could just open my mouth and say one or two little words, they’d say, “Hey, pastor!” The Messianic movement, boy you’re tough. [laughter] You guys are hard. I don’t know if it’s because you’ve been so wrecked and messed up in the church that you think, “I’m not listening to that pastor. He comes from the church.” Guess what? Truth is truth, wherever it comes from. [applause]

Let me move on, because I’m going to try my best to get to the end of this. I love what Yeshua said to Satan. If you don’t learn nothing else from what I’m talking about, could you learn these words? Can you put it up again? Four simple words, the letters Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, okay? Those are four letters, you all got that? Say, “Yud”.

Audience: Yud.

Keith: Hey.

Audience: Hey.

Keith: Vav

Audience: Vav.

Keith: Hey.

Audience: Hey.

Keith: Oh, you all know how to do that. Oh, I mean, the Messianic movement, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, you all know the letters, but I wish you all would also learn, “Away from me, Satan.” Do you know that you can actually tell him to hit the road? The tough one teaches us that when he’s had enough of this particular conversation and dialogue, he finally says, “Away from me, Satan.” For then, he does this, “It is written.” I love this. Can I one more time open up the book?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: I think it is in 6 and round about 13. I can imagine the first time he’s saying, “Man does not live by bread alone.” And the second time, as he’s on the Temple, I can hear him getting a little more energy. But by the third time, I think he’s saying this. “Yehovah Eloheikha tirah ve’eto ta’avod.” “Yehovah, your God, you shall fear and Him, you shall serve.”

I can hear him doing a Holy Ghost dance in the presence of Satan. “Oh, you want me to bare my head? Oh, let me bare my head to Him. And you would be wise, Satan, to learn to do the same thing,” because there’s only one God that you should serve. Though they will tell you, “You can go to this mosque, and you can go to this temple, and you can go to this special place of a saint, and you can go to this special appearance of Mary, and you can go to the special…” Come one, somebody. “And you can go here, and you can go there, and you can go there. And as long as it feels good to you, you are serving, and you are worshipping. You’re being spiritual.” But let me tell you something. Satan loves spiritual people. He loves people that like to get spiritual, because he’ll slip in sometimes, and act like he’s Mary.

And he’ll slip in sometimes and act like he’s Buddha. Come on, somebody. He’ll slip in sometimes, and act… Oh, I’d better stop. You all ain’t feeling it. Just as long as you will bare your head to anyone other than him, Satan is happy. But I love the fact that there are two more words in the verse in the Bible that Yeshua read. Oh, I love this so much. It says, “Yehovah, your God, you shall fear, and Him you shall serve.” And the English translators of the New Testament could not put the next two words in your English Bible. Here are the next two words. I guess I should… can I show them to you?

Audience: Yeah.

Keith: Are you all still with me here?

Audience: Yeah.

Keith: Because you all are quiet. The next two words in Deuteronomy 13 are “u’vishmoh tishaveah”. Let me just slow down, because now I’ve really got to slow down. He’s talking to the tester. The tester’s come against him in provision, and when the going gets tough, the tough…

Audience: Get to the word.

Keith: And then he brings pride. But when the going gets tough, the tough…

Audience: Get to the word.

Keith: But then the third one, power. He brings this verse, “Yehovah Eloheikha, tira ve’oto ta’avod, u’vishmoh tishaveah.” “And in His name, you shall swear.” Nehemia, my Jewish brother, would you get excited for me over the fact that Yeshua is quoting from a verse that in the original verse that he would be quoting, he would understand the significance of swearing in the name?

Nehemia: Woo-hoo!

[applause]

Keith: You see, the reason that you all don’t understand the significance of this is, you have been conditioned that you’re never supposed to swear, neither yes or no is all you’re supposed to do. However, if you look in the Hebrew version of the Gospel of Matthew which Nehemia and I have read, you will find out that he said, “You should not swear falsely.” Please learn to swear in His name, because when you swear in His name, you shall be built up.

Audience: Woo! [applause]

Keith: I talk about this in the book, and it’s something that I learned that radically changed my life. Do you know that the Father in Heaven actually wants His children to learn to swear in His name? And let me tell you why - because if you learn to swear in His name, He knows you won’t mess with lying. Because if you swear in His name and you lie, there ain’t no help for you. So if my wife pushes me to the end and says, “Keith, but did that really happen?” “Yes, baby. It happened.” “Keith, did it really happen like that?” “Yes, baby, it happened.” She’ll say this to me. “Will you swear in His name?” And I’ll raise my right hand to heaven, and I will say, “Andrea, I swear in the name Yehovah that that is what happened.” And she knows that if Keith raises his hand to swear in His name, it’s life or death.

When Satan saw Yeshua bring this verse, he didn’t have any choice but to get up of there. He had to leave at that point, because Yeshua’s saying, “You can come to me with provision,” and Satan’s thinking, “Well, maybe I can get you to do what Moses did. Maybe I can get you to do something outside of what God has commanded you to do.” You know, with Moses, it says in Exodus 17 they called it “masa”, but in Numbers 20 Moses decided to take it into his own hands, God said, “Take the staff. Go again, speak to the rock.” Moses got caught up and struck the rock two times. And Satan probably thought, “If I could just get Yeshua to strike the rock, if I could just get him to make the provision himself, maybe he will be kept from the promised land.” But Yeshua had read the story of Moshe. He had read the story of Genesis and Exodus. Come on, somebody, Leviticus, and Numbers, and Deuteronomy. And he ain’t like some of us. After he reads it, he understands it. “I’m not going to be tricked. I will not take my own power from my provision. I will not fall down and do something stupid and ask God to fix it. I’m not throwing myself from the Temple. I’m not a fool.”

But when it came to power, Yeshua understood where the real power is. And if it’s possible, just possible, that Yeshua had what I call “the power of perspective.” Let me end this thing like this. I want you to open your Bibles to this verse. I’m rolling up my sleeves, because it’s going to get real interesting now. “Now, there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey,” but in English, “the LORD”, and Satan also came among them. The LORD said to Satan, ‘From where do you come?’”

Now, some of us think that Satan has his own will that is outside the will of when the Father wants him to do something. When God asks Satan a question, Satan couldn’t say, “I’m Satan. I don’t want to answer Your question.” I mean, Satan could have done that, right? Except he’s in the presence of the Almighty. When the Almighty says, “Question,” Satan knows, “I’d better answer.” Now you all have gone real quiet, and that’s okay. “From where do you come from?” Then Satan answers the Lord and said, “From roaming about the earth, walking around on it,” and then a radical line that most people do not like to read. But before I get to the line, I should give you the picture. He roams around the earth. He’s not omniscient. He’s not omnipresent. If he’s not in this room, look at your neighbor and say, “He ain’t here.”

Audience: He ain’t here.

Keith: If he’s in this room, he’s not in your hotel room. If he’s in your hotel room, he can’t also be at your house. He can only be in one place at a time, because I’ve got to give you all a secret. Satan is not God.

Audience: Yeah. [applause]

Keith: From roaming about on the earth and walking around in it, checking, looking, seeing, if I could find somebody to fall to the test. “Have you considered my servant, Job?” Can I stop here for a minute? The Creator of the universe is talking to haSatan, the adversary, and He’s saying, “Have you considered my servant, Job?” Wait a minute. You mean to say that God brought the idea of test to the adversary about his servant, Job? Come to find out that that’s exactly what happened. Satan said this. “Oh yeah, sure. Job. He’s got it going on. He’s got a good house, a good wife, got a good bank account, got a good family. He’s got flocks, and herds, and all that stuff. But if You let me do what I can do, he’ll curse You to Your face.” And the Father says this, “Very well. But only this far.”

And normally, Tyler should be running around the room in revival when I told you what I just told you, because what you need to know is this - Satan has a leash.

Audience: Woo! [applause]

Keith: And let me tell you who’s on the other end of Satan’s leash. Oh, he doesn’t like this, I can guarantee he ain’t in the room right now. I think Yeshua knows the story of Job, and I think Yeshua knew that his Father is the one that will decide who will be tested and for how much they will be tested. I love the fact, when I think about the picture of Satan saying, “Well, how far can I go?” And He says, “You can only go this far.” “But I want to go further.” “You can only go this far.” So guess what Satan does? You think Satan says, “Well, hey. I’m Satan. I’m going to do what I want. I’m going to go beyond the line.” Guess what? “Here’s as far as you can go.”

And so after that, Job doesn’t fall into the situation, so Satan comes back, the Sons of God, present themselves before God, and Satan also comes in. And I can hear God’s with kind of a smirk on His face. “Satan, you who know all things, have you considered my servant, Job?” He says, “Yeah, but listen. Let me touch his body.” I know this is very uncomfortable for you all, but “Let me touch his body.” And God says this, “Very well. You can touch my servant Job’s body.” Satan went out and he could only go this far. And yet, in the end, Job did not curse God, and Satan lost. [applause]

I’m telling you, somebody’s got to hear me. Somebody’s got to hear me. Somebody’s got to hear me. Now, you guys, listen to me, just listen to me, bear with me. I’m going to get through this. There is one God who sits high and looks low. He’s not cowering in heaven, saying, “What am I going to do about Satan? I have no authority. I have no power. But if enough people would just pray, maybe My will shall be done.” I’m not trying to be funny, but I’m telling you something. There are too many Methodists that think like this. Bear with me, just for a second. “Maybe if we pray enough, maybe God will do something… maybe Satan will…”

Listen, let me tell you something. Satan does not have the authority of God. [applause] Thank you, sister. Here again, you keep standing. You keep standing, and maybe they’re going to catch up with you. Some of you are cowering. Some of you are backing down. Some of you are saying, “He’s got too much power.” But somebody has got to hear me today. There is one God, and it is not Satan! [applause] Oh, listen to me now. Listen to me, listen to what I’m saying. There’s only one. There’s only one. There’s one that you bare your head to. There’s one that gives you provision. There’s one that has all the power, and it is not Satan!

I’m going to do something. Stay standing. Stay standing, if you will, because maybe the internet crowd is understanding what I’m saying. Maybe some of them are running around the room saying, “You mean to say there’s really only one I should fear? You mean to say, there’s really only one I should serve? And you mean to tell me that even Yeshua at the third point of his test did not even say, ‘In My name,’ but rather he said, ‘I’ve learned to swear in His name.’” Why is that important? Because he understood there was only one thing you do when the going gets tough, the tough get the word.

Audience: Get the word.

Keith: Hold on, now. I’m going to say something radical, and I’m so glad this is the last time I’m speaking, because I’m sure now I’m in trouble. They might not let me back tomorrow. I’ve got to tell you something. When Yeshua is standing before Satan, based on what our understanding is in Western Christianity, you would have thought he’d have done something else.

I told Michael this morning this. We were outside of the hotel and I said, “You know what, Michael? I’m convinced of something. If Yeshua walked on the streets of Albuquerque, New Mexico on a Sunday morning, and he walked into most Methodist churches, he would walk into the Methodist church and he would say, ‘What are you doing?’ He would say, ‘What are you all only singing to me?’”

Oh, Lord, have mercy. Could somebody pray for me, right now? Just pray for me, right now. I am convinced that Yeshua would walk into most Methodist churches on Sunday morning and say, “Are you all ever going to focus on the One that we’re to fear, and the One that we’re to worship?” And I am convinced that most Methodist pastors would tell Yeshua, “You sound a little too Jewish. Get out.”

Audience: Oh!

Keith: Now, why do I say this? I love the ministry and work and life of Yeshua. I love what he did. I love what he said. I love the miracles. I love the marvellous power. I love that he was clothed, that the Holy Spirit was indwelling in him. I love all of that. But more than anything that I love about Yeshua is this - he continued to point people to his Father.

[applause]

I have to got to end this now, and I’m going to end it this way. I don’t know if my sister Karen is even here. But if she is, I want her to come forward. I’m going to close with this Scripture. Here it is, you guys, Isaiah 55:9. “‘For My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways My ways,’ declares Yehovah. ‘For as the heavens are higher than the earth,’” so are My ways higher than the religious institutions, the Messianic movement, the denominations, the Jewish synagogues. My ways are higher than your ways, and My thoughts are higher than the Litvak Jew. My thoughts are higher than my seminary professors. My thoughts are higher than the Hebrew University folks. My thoughts are higher even than those.

[applause]

Give it to me, again. “My thoughts are higher than your thoughts. For as the rain, and the snow come down from heaven and do not return without their watering the earth, and making it there, and sprout and furnishing seeds for the sower and bread to the eater.” If you can let me say amen, if I can continue, just say amen.

Audience: Amen.

Keith: I’m going to the book now. Just say, “Keith, if you can just let me give you the next slides,” say amen.

Audience: Amen.

Keith: Here is the next slide. “So will My word which goes forth from My mouth it will not return to Me empty without accomplishing what I desire, without proceeding in the manner in which I said,” when the going gets tough, the tough go to the word. [applause] Oh. Oh. Oh. Hey, somebody. Oh, my goodness.

Why is it, in closing, why is it, in closing. Oh, my God. There’s something in my gut, I’m trying to get it out. I’m trying to preach it out.

Man: Go on.

Keith: I’m trying to say it, so I won’t have to… You got to bear with me, you all. I just want to get it out so that I can… But you’ve got to understand something. Our Father, He loves us so much. He decided to speak that which is on His mind, to come out of His mouth and put it on paper. And we have people who’ve decided, “You know what? I don’t want to know that. I want to be religious. I want to be spiritual. I want to be in charge, but I do not want an encounter with the word of God.”

Why is it that when the going gets tough, that the tough get the word? I’m going to show you why. Yehovah’s word represents what is in Yehovah’s mind, spoken through Yehovah’s mouth, and now is available in written form in Yehovah’s Torah.

[applause]

Would you bear with me? Would you bear with me, I’ll just tell you one last story? I want you to sit down for a second. And sister Karen, I want you to stay here. There’s something that’s calling people like me from all over the world. We’re being called back to the original language, history, and context of our Bibles. There are some people that will say, “Keith cannot come because he’s a Methodist,” not realizing that God is using the Methodist denomination to get a hold of me.

Sometimes, the Father will use things that we don’t even imagine that He will use, to awaken us. When I was 14 years old, I became a Christian. When I was 15, I was in the church, and they used to sing this song that I never understood why the song moved me so much, and the song was called Amazing Grace. And when they would sing Amazing Grace, I would be moved sometimes to tears.

About a month ago, my sister-in-law was making a joke with me about a man named Whitley Phipps. When I was 15, 16, and 17 years old, Whitley Phipps would come in our church. He had the craziest hairdo you’ve ever seen, and he would sing old Negro spirituals. And I would laugh at Whitley Phipps. So we were laughing about what his name was, and she finds him online, and came to find out that Whitley Phipps now looks like Nehemia - bald - but he tells this story that I have to tell you, in closing. He says that when the slaves came over from Africa, most, if not all Negro spirituals are played only on the black notes. If we had a piano here and it was on, I would go over and play Negro spirituals that only used five black notes. [sings] “Swing low, sweet chariot, comin’ for to carry me home.” No white notes, all black notes. Now, some of you are getting nervous - this sounds racial. Why the black notes? I don’t know, maybe it’s because of the five Books of Moses, I don’t know. [laughter]

But there’s a story that he tells about a man who wrote Amazing Grace. And this man that wrote Amazing Grace is given credit for the words. But it says that the music is unknown. Musicologists have now done studies and gone over to West Africa and found out there’s a tomb that is the basis for Amazing Grace. It is a mourning chant by West Africans; so this slave, a ship captive, wrote Amazing Grace. But the music came from down below in the ship. [hums Amazing Grace]. Can you hear it? Can you feel it? Down in the ship, on boats like the ship named “Jesus”, that stopped at the shores of West Africa, put them in boats after baptizing them in the water, chaining them like sardines, and all they could do was chant the mourn. And the ship’s captain took words and put them over the chant. And this black man, who’s a Methodist, hears the song. And all I think about is those brothers and sisters in the ship singing something like [sings Amazing Grace].

And so we can take present-day Christianity and take words and layer them over sounds that really don’t even match. And so when I come and try to give you access to His name, and when my brother Andrew comes and he sings and combines the name with the music, some of you say, “No, no, no, no, no, it doesn’t match.”

But I’m here to tell you something. It matches in heaven. And there are some of you here today that in your gut, you feel in your gut, that He is calling you back to His name.

You have been listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon’s Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

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Inviting the Name In with Keith Johnson (Open Door Series Part 6)

In Part 6 of the Open Door series, Keith Johnson speaks about “Inviting the Name In”. Throughout history both Jews and Christians have allowed fear, anger, and circumstances to separate them from God’s name. But our heavenly Father said He would bless every place where his name dwells. Johnson examines two “Gittites” who interacted with God’s name — Goliath the Gittite who cursed it, and Obededom the Gittite who received the Name into his home. Johnson exhorts Christian listeners to be ambassadors of the name, and for the sake of the Jew first, to proclaim it to the world so that the house of Israel may be blessed and restored. Be like Obededom, “the Gittite who got it right!”

Transcript

Inviting the Name In with Keith Johnson (Open Door Series Part 6)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Keith: Now I’m supposed to speak. And so what I’m going to need to happen is for the Creator of the universe to speak through me. I’m going to need the one who introduced Himself on the mountain at the time of Shavuot to once again introduce Himself personally to His people. It has been very difficult for me to see the response amongst those who call themselves the people of God, one of God’s special ones. It’s been hard for me to be associated with an entire religious movement that will not welcome one of God’s special possessions into their buildings to teach the Bible that they don’t even know about. It’s been hard for me to then be amongst those who call themselves Messianics, who at many times only want the fruit but not the labor.

So for me, after ten years - nine years with my friend, Nehemia, and my 10th Shavuot - I am tired. And that’s probably a good time for the Holy Spirit.

It says “They rebelled and grieved His Holy Spirit; therefore, He turned Himself to become their enemy. He fought against them.” History is being repeated. The Holy Spirit is being grieved again. Oh, I like that it’s so quiet in here, because I know you all understand that right now, after hearing what I heard with Nehemia, I was a wreck. Michael Rood was holding me up, I didn’t think I was going to be able to stand. But you can just say- Keith, say, “Keith”.

Audience: Keith.

Keith: Have a seat.

Audience: Have a seat.

Keith: Yes, Keith, have a seat. Spirit of the Living God [applause] - stand up and tell somebody the truth. The Scripture goes on in verse 11 to say this, “Then His people remembered the days of old.” And then it uses this wonderful word, Moshe. I love Moses. I love Moshe. I love his very life. I love his very walk. I love that Moshe found himself just being born in the world and found himself amongst the Egyptians. I love that Moshe grew up in the house of Pharaoh. And some of you, if you saw Moshe, you would say, “We can’t listen to him, because he’s in the house of Pharaoh.” But you don’t realize that the Creator of the universe has a plan for the Moses’s of the world that are still in the house of Pharaoh. [applause]

The reason He’s got them there is He’s preparing them, He’s molding them, He’s shaping them, He’s using them, so that one day, maybe nine or ten Shavuots later they’re willing to stand up and tell Pharaoh, “No more.”

And I have to say something. Pharaoh - no more. [applause] The people remember the days of old, of Moshe, and they ask this question, “Where is He who brought them up out of the sea with the shepherds of His flock? Where is He?” And here it comes, you all. Out of the book that Nehemia reads it says this, “Where is He who put His Holy Spirit in the midst of them?” Ten Shavuots later in Dallas, Texas, I am telling you right now - the ruakh, the Spirit of God, is checking again. And I hate to say it... Nehemia is up here going through his slides. I don’t know if you noticed, he had about 50 more slides he thought he was going to go through, and then all of a sudden, I looked at Michael and I said, “Here it comes. And Nehemia said, “No more slides.” And I could sense, Nehemia, at that very moment, the Ruakh HaKodesh who was in the midst of our people, your people, because not only do I count, but my friend Nehemia counts. [applause]

The same Ruakh HaKodesh that was hovering over the face of the deep. You know it in the Bible. “Bereshit bara Elohim et hashamayim ve’et ha’aretz, hayeta tohu vavohu vakhoshekh al peney tehom.” And the ruakh was doing what? Merakhefet - hovering over the face of the deep. And in this room, the same ruakh that has been hovering over the darkness, that has been hovering over my friend Nehemia, that is hovering over Yisrael, that has been hovering over places, asking, “Are you going to stop grieving me?” That Holy Spirit is now hovering. Michael, you will hear testimony of people that are listening to this particular time the entire weekend, and they will say to you, “It was as if the spirit of God came into my house.” And I’m going to tell you why they’re going to say it, because the ruakh is looking again.

Oh, I was so excited when Nehemia told me that he saw Elijah. You know, some of you say, “Theologically, can that happen?” Bump theology for a minute. [laughter] And I love the fact that Nehemia said he slammed the door. But what he really didn’t tell you, since he wants to get personal, is what happened in Smithfield, North Carolina was this - he preached, I got up, tried to do what I was supposed to do. The similar thing happened to me. We got through the message, and what moved me more than anything else was I was standing before a group of people with my Tanakh, this right here. Oh, you might want to get controversial now. In this Tanakh there is no New Testament. Did you know that Yeshua didn’t have the New Testament? [applause]

Now, I know you all are getting nervous and you’re probably going to get texting, calling people, “Oh, here it comes.” No, listen to me now. I was in a church with a non-Messianic, non-Christian Jewish man who was preaching the word of God. And when I stood with the very Bible that I have been trying to learn for the last 10 years, and my teacher has been the Hebrew scholar who helped me understand to read it in its language and its history and in its context, just like Yeshua read it… And I’m in this church and the Ruakh HaKodesh comes into the church, and the first person that the ruakh touched was me. I have to say it that way, because if I tell you what I really think, the first person that was touched... somebody say, “The Jew first.” [laughter and applause]

And Nehemia told me something that I will tell you. You see, we both have a history. We know about manipulation. We know about the game; you all know about the game. Many of you came here and said, “Boy, if they would just have Michael and Nehemia and Arthur, and maybe Dr. Taylor, but the Methodist? Are you kidding me? He’s a Sunday morning preacher.” You all still don’t understand. Just call me Moses. I have been brought up in the house of Pharaoh, and the Creator of the universe, for some reason - and I don’t know why - has decided to ignite me from the inside out. Now, let me tell you a secret. You know who my heart is for? And you might as well look at your neighbor and say, “uh-oh”, right now.

Audience: Uh-oh.

Keith: You see, the Messianic movement says to me, “Hey, we don’t need you. We’ve been there, done that. We’ve been there, we’ve done that. We got this thing. We understand Judaism. We understand Christianity. We’ve got this figured out, we’ll take a little bit from Nehemia, and we like Michael, but we don’t need you.” And you know what, can I tell you something, Messianic movement? I don’t need you. [applause] But I love you. And I am concerned for you, and I want you to experience the Ruakh HaKodesh in your life. [applause]

But let me tell you where my heart is. And I love the fact that the Messianics have invited my friend Nehemia and myself, I appreciate it. Let me say it again, I appreciate it. But let me tell you who my heart is broken for. Those people that are still sitting in those pews, in those churches. And many of you all say, “I don’t want nothing to do with them.” And God is saying, “Why? Are you not concerned for my creation? Do you not remember where you came from?”

How many in the room were born Messianic? Can I not find three? I can’t find three. And the ones that I see that have their hands up are children. Am I right? [laughter] You mean to tell me there are no birthright Messianics in the room? Where did you all come from? Look at your neighbor and say “Pharaoh”.

Audience: Pharaoh.

Keith: And you should be excited that the Creator of the universe has ignited you. But don’t you think for a moment that He doesn’t love them as much as He loves you. [applause]

I am going to try now, and I thank you Father so much that you rescued me, I know my wife must be praying for me. Because I promise you, I wasn’t going to make it two minutes. But now you all get to listen to the message from Smithfield, North Carolina. And I will tell you in advance, so that there are no surprises, we’re not going to do anything to manipulate you. We’re not going to do anything to try to get you to some sort of emotional response. I’m going to tell you right now ahead of time, just so we will know that it is not Nehemia, it is not Michael, it is not Dr. Taylor, it is not Arthur, and it is not me. I’m going to tell you in advance that my Creator of the universe has already told me He is coming. [applause] And let me tell you why. Because since He has it on His calendar, He’s always wondering if His people will put it on theirs.

Look at your neighbor and say, “I got it on my calendar.”

Audience: I got it on my calendar.

Keith: Oh, even those that are listening right now on the internet, you’ve got it on your calendar. You could be out walking, you could be out shopping, you could be out doing anything, but because you heard years and years and years ago that the Creator of the universe called a mixed, say “mixed”.

Audience: Mixed.

Keith: A mixed multitude of people to His mountain, when He called the mixed multitude to His mountain, there was thunder and there were shofars and there was fire, and then the first three words He said were, “Anokhi Yehovah Elohekha.” “I am Yehovah, your God.” Now are you ready to hear what started a worldwide movement?

First Samuel chapter 3, verse 1 says this, “And the word of the Lord was rare in those days and visions were infrequent.” Now, I have done something as a result of my studies with Nehemia. I have decided that if I can read the original language, then why can’t I also make some, what I call, translation decisions? So I have what I call the KJV. Can I get an amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: It’s called the Keith Johnson Version. [laughter] Now, the conservative evangelicals get very nervous. They say, “You can’t mess with translations. We’ve got the NIV.” Let me tell you something - my translation is better than the NIV. Okay, that’s a few claps, thank you over there. That’s my amen corner over there in the corner. Here’s what the Keith Johnson Version would say. If you would open up the Bible that Yeshua read it would say this, “The word of Yehovah was yakar, say “yakar”.

Audience: Yakar.

Keith: That means it was rare, precious. And there were no nifratz, say “nifratz”.

Audience: Nifratz.

Keith: That means the word breakthrough. And it says “khazon”, say “khazon”,

Audience: Khazon.

Keith: Visions or prophecies. Literally what this verse says is the word of Yehovah was precious, it was rare, and there were no breakthrough prophecies at that time. Does that not sound like 2011 in our country? Where are the breakthrough prophecies? Where are the breakthrough visions? Where are the people who understand who He is, and who we are, according to His will? Good news; His word is breaking through again.

So we have Samuel, who is sleeping there next to the Ark of Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey. And as he’s sleeping there, all of a sudden, he gets a word that says, “Samuel,” and Samuel does what we normally do. Samuel went to his religious leader and asked his religious leader, “Yes, Lord?” Oh, I wish I had more than the amen corner. I’m hoping that when the ruakh comes it’ll move from just this corner to over here, to way back there, and we might even get the left-handed folks over here. [laughter]

Samuel heard the word, “Samuel,” and he got up even though it was the word of the Creator of the universe, and he ran to the religious authority and he said, “Yes, sir?” And the religious authority was so drunk with sleep and food, he did not realize until the third time that possibly God was calling outside of Him. Oh my gosh. [applause]

And so the third time it happens, Eli says this, “Hey, it’s a possibility that God might be calling you outside of our movement. There are not many breakthrough visions, and the word of Yehovah is rare, and I am the leader. I am the priest. I am in charge of the movement. I am the big dog, I get the big salary, I’ve got the house. I’ve got the car. I’ve got the authority. I’ve got the power. But it’s possible that the Creator of the universe didn’t tell me what He wants to do with you.”

Oh, I feel this now. Oh, I feel this thing now. And so Samuel says, “Okay, so Eli, what should I do?” He says, “The next time when you’re laying down, if He calls you again, say, ‘Here I am.’ Call Him by His name. ‘I’m listening.’” And sure enough, Samuel was laying down at night next to the Ark. Oh, I love the fact that sometimes our Father waits until the night to call us. Oh, I’m so glad that sometimes He waits until your phone is not ringing. He waits until your television is not on. He waits until you’re not checking your email and He waits until you sleep and then He calls you. Oh, and I’m not just talking about the night when we sleep, I’m also talking about the night in our lives. Because there are some of us here that are in night. And He’s saying, “Samuel, Samuel.” And you know what Samuel finally realized? He heard the call again, and he said, “Here I am. Speak, for thy servant is listening.” Can I stop?

Audience: No.

Keith: Oh, I’ve got to stop for a minute, because I’ve got to ask a question, left side. Are you in a position over here that if He calls you by name in the midst of your night, are you willing to say, “Speak, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, for I am listening?”

Audience: Yeah! [applause]

Keith: Can I ask you all in the back? These are the real smart people back here. Nehemia said, “Come forward.” They said, “I’m not going close there, I’m sitting right here. Tell me to move - I’m not moving nowhere.” Can I ask you in the back if it’s night for you? Maybe you had a good meal and you’re sleeping. You’ve watched the NBA Finals or something like that, and you’re sleeping and He comes to you and He says your name twice. Are you willing to say, “Speak, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, for I am listening”? I’m so glad I’ve got the amen corner, because I’ve got to turn this way and I’ve got to say something really radical to three people. I’ve got to say something to Nehemia and Judith and Michael. In the midst of your night, if the Creator of the universe says, “Nehemia, Judith and Michael, are you willing to say ‘Speak, speak, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, for we are listening’”? Why do amen corner get so quiet now? [laughter] “Oh, amen Keith, Oh, get up Keith!” Now it got personal, you see what I’m saying? If He speaks, will you say you’re listening?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: Well, I’m here to tell you all something. Nehemia, He’s coming again. [applause] Michael and Judith, the latter shall be greater than the former. Ready? Are you ready? This one little word that people hate. I-F. If. You all hate that “if” word, don’t you? We want the blessings. Why does He have to put that “if” in there? The latter shall be greater than the former if you keep your ear listening to Him.

When Samuel responded, the Creator of the universe told him what to do. We are here as a result of putting ourselves in a position to realize that we don’t know it all. We don’t know half of it, but we’ve learned to say, “Speak, for we are listening.” What would happen if the people of God were like Samuel? I am convinced that the rare - the yakar - visions would begin to break through across this world.

What’s happening right now? Too many religious games. Too many manmade agendas, too many people that are focusing more on their place of power rather than getting in the power of the One that called them in the first place. [applause] This is where Samuel was sitting, where he was laying… I found a picture. I love this picture. I’m not saying that it’s exactly according to the actual description of the Ark of the Covenant. But I’m going to tell you why this caught my attention. Samuel was laying next to something that had two things at least, and I really believe three. One, the Ark of the Covenant represented the word of God inside the Ark. The second thing it represented was the word of God outside the Ark. For the Bible teaches us that parts of the Torah were inside the Ark, the stones, right? With the 10 words - you guys know about that. But did you know that also they would meet at the Ark, and the Creator of the universe would speak verbally to them? So it represented the word on the inside, somebody say, “word of God”.

Audience: Word of God.

Keith: And the word on the outside, say, “word of God”.

Audience: Word of God.

Keith: Now, let me get controversial. The problem I have with my rabbinate brothers who have decided that they can interpret the written word and put it at the same place as what’s called the oral word. They take the oral word and say when the oral word does not match with the written word, we go with the authority of the rabbi. So here you’ve got Nehemia Gordon at a young age, probably not long after he saw Elijah, who realizes, “Wait, something ain’t right here. Here’s what it says in the oral, here’s what it says in the written. If the oral says the rabbi says, and the written says that Yehovah says; if Yehovah says something that doesn’t match what the rabbi says, why are we going with the rabbi?” And they’re saying, “Hey, don’t mess with the power.” So we sit back and say, “Those terrible rabbis, can you believe what they do? They interpret the word of God, and it’s not clear with the word of God...” Let me tell you who else does that - the Methodists, [applause] the Baptists, the Pentecostals, the Catholics, and I won’t say anything else, but look at your neighbor and say, “It might be us, too.” Shhh. But what the Ark represented was the word of God.

Now, let me give you one little thing before we move on. If you hear something that you say is from Yehovah, and it is contrary to that which He gave unto Moses, you better realize it’s another spirit. Can I say that again?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: No, I need to say that again. If you say, “I heard from Yehovah,” and you open the book and it does not match – “If it does not fit, you must acquit.” [laughter] Here’s the problem that I have. And I’m going to tell you, I’m so glad that this is the last thing that I have on my schedule for right now. I’m going to pour myself out to Him today. I’m waiting to find more people like my Jewish friend Nehemia who says this, “Is that in the word?” And this is why some people hate him. Because he doesn’t go with what is spoken that is contrary to what is written. God is not a man that He should lie, nor son of man that he should change His mind. Does he speak and not act? Does He promise and not fulfill? If He wrote it and He said it, they will match. Can I get an amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: Let me go now to the issue. We’ve got the Ark. Now, I don’t know if you guys know it or not, but if we take a picture of that Ark again, one of the things that’s most amazing about this Ark - there was actually a third thing. Not only the word that was on the inside, not only the way it was spoken on the outside, but what they called the Ark.

Go, if you would, to Second Samuel 6:2, it says this, “Then David arose with the people to Ba’ale-Judah.” Now, that is interesting, Nehemia. Is that possible? That these two words would be connected? I mean, that’s interesting to me. David arose with the people to Ba’ale-Judah to bring up from there the Ark of God,” and here it comes, “which is called by the name.” Did you all hear that? They brought up the Ark of God, which has the written word and the spoken word, which is called by the name. And in case you don’t realize, as my friend says, that they’re talking about the explicit name, it says this, “the very name Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey.”

Now I’ve got to stop you all, and I’ve got to tell you something. I feel the tension. You all are probably sitting and saying, “Now, look, Keith, you’re up here talking about Yehovah, Michael is talking about Yahweh. And let me say it again - Nehemia has already said it - let’s put aside pronunciation for a moment. But if Michael will let me get him in a room for about a day, if he just reads the book His Hollowed Name Revealed Again. [laughter] (In Michael’s voice:) “I received a revelation at the Smithfield revival. This is now the pronunciation of the name.” Can I get an amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: The very name Yehovah Tzeva’ot who is enthroned between the cherubim. Now, you guys, here’s where I get really excited. The Ark is called by the name. Did you all hear me? The Ark is called by the name. Did you all hear me? And I can’t get no amens in Dallas?

Audience: Amen!

Keith: Something happened. David, the Jew, wanted to bring the Ark called by the name to the Old City of David. And so as he grabbed the Ark, and he had the priests and he had the procession, and all the people were together, he was walking and praising and singing and dancing. He’s bringing the Ark called by the name to the Old City of David, and something happened. There was a man, though there was clear instruction what not to do, this man named Uzzah decided to reach out and steady the name. Oh, you all didn’t hear me. They were doing everything right. They were praising, and they were worshiping, and they had the Ark called by the name, and Uzzah, as he was walking, decided, “God needs my help.” And he reached out his hand and he tried to steady the oxen that were taking the Ark, and the Creator of the universe looked down and said, “Did I not say?” And struck him dead. And this is where those in my tradition get very nervous, and they don’t like this part of the Bible.

This is why Marcion was so effective. You see, Marcion said, “In the Old Testament it’s a bad God. He’s a mean God, He kills people. But the New Testament is a loving God and He loves to hold sheep.” [laughter] So what happened was this - when Uzzah was struck down by the Creator of the universe, something happened in David’s heart. David - and I have it here for you on the screen - became angry because of Yehovah’s outburst against Uzzah. And that place is called Perez Uzzah to this day. Stay there with me. The next thing that happened is David became afraid of Yehovah that very day, and said, “How can the Ark,” somebody say, “called by the name”.

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: ...come to me? Oh, I hope that some of my Jewish brothers and sisters, some of my Karaite brothers and sisters, some of my Orthodox brothers and sisters, some of my Messianic brothers and sisters who have gone with the tradition that says, “do not deal with the name” will read this verse. Because David became afraid, and David was angry. And as a result, he did something that is radical. Here’s what he did. David was unwilling to move the Ark of Yehovah, somebody say, “called by the name”.

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: You all ain’t got this yet. I’m down here in Dallas, I’ve been waiting for this. You all still ain’t got this. You got this, Karen? Your sister got this? David was unwilling to move the Ark of Yehovah called by the...

Audience: Name.

Keith: You all still ain’t got this. When I say “Yehovah”, you all say, “called by the name”. You all with me now? Left side - you with me?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: The amen corner has been quiet since I bothered em, they didn’t say an amen since. David was unwilling to move the Ark of Yehovah...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: Into the city of David, but David... [laughing] I’m laughing to myself. Me and God, we’re having a party right now. David did something that I’m so glad that he did. David took the Ark...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: One more time, now. Do we have time for this, Michael? David was unwilling to move the Ark of Yehovah...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: Into the city of David, but David took the Ark...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: Aside to the house of Obed-Edom the Gittite. You all don’t got it yet. That’s okay. Let me tell you what he did. David said this, “I’m angry, I’m upset, I’m impatient with the holiness of His name. I don’t like this right now, so what I’m going to do is I’m going to take the Ark...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: And drop it off at Obed-Edom the Gittite’s house”. Now, when David stopped at Obed-Edom the Gittite’s house, I can see the procession. Obed minding his own business doing his own thing, and all of a sudden, they hear this (horn sound) and they hear the prayers and the people... Can I just show you what I think they heard?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: I think that Obed was minding his own business, probably sitting back watching television or something like that. Maybe the football game, I don’t know. But then all of a sudden there was a rumbling, and he heard the feet of the Levites walking, and he heard the people singing, and he probably heard something like... I’m not going to do it. You all ain’t ready for that. [audience protesting] Listen to me now. You’re Obed-Edom. You’re in Dallas, you’re minding your own business. All of a sudden, the Jew, David decides he is angry and afraid of the ark.

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: So he says, “I’m going to drop it off at your house.” No, I’m telling you all, you ain’t ready for this. No, you ain’t ready for that. It ain’t time for that yet. No, you’re not ready for that, because if you were ready for that, we would have a second revival in Dallas. If you were ready for that, I’m telling you right now people would stand up and they would say, “I got to have it!” But I know you’re not ready for that. No, you’re not ready for that. You’ve got to sit back down. No, sit back down, church. No, no, no. I’m sorry, you all. I didn’t tell you the whole story. [applause]

He’s minding his own business, and Obed the Gittite who’s minding his own business... all of a sudden Obed hears them probably singing and walking, and he probably hears the shouts and the screams and the yells and he maybe hears the sounds. And maybe, I’m not sure, there was probably a procession. David was leaving, and he was angry. He was afraid, he was upset but he said, “The Ark which is...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: ...ain’t coming to my house.” David the king said, “I am afraid and I am angry. And the Ark which is...”

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: ...ain’t coming to my house.” Somebody say, “There might be Obed-Edom.”

Audience: There might be Obed-Edom.

Keith: There might be Obed-Edom, who’s minding his own business, and then maybe as they’re walking, they hear the singing, and they hear the shouting and the sound of the shofar and maybe Obed-Edom’s wife said, “Hey baby.” “Yeah, what’s up?” “Something’s rumbling in the city.” Maybe she says, “Get up, Obed-Edom!” “What’s wrong?” And maybe Obed-Edom got up and peeked and opened the door to his house, and then maybe Obed-Edom opened the door and looked and saw what was coming, and slammed the door.

Until the king knocked on his door. David the king. And, you know, the reason I’m not going to blow this... [audience protesting] the reason I can’t blow this is then I will be charged with being an old-fashioned revival preacher that is going to use emotion to get you to move. So would you do me a favor? We’re on television right now, and there are people that are judging me and Nehemia, and they’re saying it’s all about emotion, and “all you guys did was use manipulation”. Would you do me a favor and let the people that are in their houses keep standing. But would you all do me a favor? Would you be willing to sit down?

Audience: No!

Keith: Wait a minute, hold on. Okay. Can we do a deal? Can we do a deal in Dallas? Here’s the deal in Dallas. Listen to me. You’ve got to understand something. Listen, this will get your attention. I’m a black preacher [applause] with a tradition of calling people to the altar. And many of my Messianic brothers and sisters who have seen this in churches, in their heart they’re saying “that can’t be God”. Because I still have more of the message, I don’t want you all to end up responding to the call of the shofar, and I can’t get it on tape. So if you just do me a favor... I promise, if you’ll just hold on for a little bit, I’m going to get to the shofar. Would you all be willing to sit down?

Audience: No!

Keith: I’m the religious authority. I just don’t think that this fits within the schedule that we have. I’m convinced that Obed-Edom heard something like this. Are you sure? [applause] I’m not trying to be manipulative. I want to say something, Nehemia. You all, we are not playing. Jew and Methodist have experienced revival and conversion in our hearts. [applause] The conversion that we have experienced is from the father, Avinu, the Creator, the one who made Nehemia and made me. He has decided to send His ruakh, His holy spirit. He has touched the Jew first, and then the Gentile. [applause] [Shofar sounds] [applause]

Now, that was for the people in Dallas that are waiting for the introduction of the ruakh in Dallas on Shavuot. So those of you that just heard it, would you now sit down? Those that are listening online today, tomorrow and until the end of time, you might want to ask yourself this question. Do you want to keep listening? Because my brothers and sisters here really don’t have a choice. We’ve got guards that will not let them leave this room, [laughter] but you can shut the television off. You can shut off the internet and you can say, “I’m not listening to no Methodist and I’m not listening to no Jew. I’m sticking with Eli, my religious authority. David was unwilling to move the Ark of Yehovah...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: Into the city of David, but David took the Ark...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: Inside to the house of Obed-Edom the Gittite, somebody say “uh-oh”.

Audience: Uh-oh.

Keith: ...the Gittite is not an Israelite! Hold it. Wait a minute. David must be confused. He bought the Ark...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: ...to a Gittite who was not an Israelite. Now I have to testify. I was minding my own business. I asked Nehemia Gordon, and I’m going to tell you guys something - you don’t know the half of who Nehemia Gordon was ten Shavuots ago. Judith knows, Michael knows, and I know. There’s even a story that they used to call Nehemia “the Iceman”. They said that Nehemia’s heart was so cold and so hard, there was some in his own movement that would write letters and said, “The Iceman said...” and this offended Nehemia, and it should have offended him. But I think 10 years ago, they weren’t that wrong. Nehemia had the Litvak in him down to a science. He knew about intellect. He knew about Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, Ugaritic and he taught me all of it.

But there was something that Nehemia was running from, and it was not Jesus. There’s something Nehemia was running from, and it is not Yeshua. Nehemia was running from the fact that his daddy taught him, and his daddy’s daddy taught him, and his daddy’s daddy’s daddy taught him that we are the intellectual elite, we have the information. But do you know what Nehemia was running from? He was running from the inspiration, so it knocked at his door. And he shut the door. But for ten Shavuots this man has left his place of comfort. This man has stepped out. Oh, you don’t understand, this man has stepped out in a way that you don’t understand.

Let me tell you what he did, and this is why I have to testify. He gave me access to information that there’s not another United Methodist pastor in the world that has gotten that same information. There’s not another United Methodist pastor in the world that has gotten the information and the access to information. And let me tell you why Nehemia did it. He did it because he said this, “I don’t want the information to be my information that you’ve got to come to Nehemia, the great... you know, whoever.” He says, “I want this information to be spread to the world.” So let’s get a Methodist, he’ll do it. [laughter]

He almost told you the real story about The Hebrew Yeshua Versus the Greek Jesus, but I’ll let him tell it at another time. This guy gives me this information, and he says, “I want you to use the information and add some inspiration so that the name can be spread around the world.” [applause]

Now, can I take one little section from this that you guys are going to understand, because I sense the ruakh... What’s my friend’s name over there? You might want to shut that door. Can you shut that door there? Shut the door when you go out, you all. I’m a little bit nervous here. Let’s see if we can keep Him out. Let’s keep the Holy Spirit out. Shut the door please.

Audience: No!

Keith: No, you all don’t want that, because if the Holy Spirit comes in here, some of you might realize that the Holy Spirit is bigger than your movement. [applause] Thank you for shutting the door. Second Samuel 6:11, “And the Ark...”

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: “...remained in the house of Obed-Edom the Gittite for three months,” say “three months”.

Audience: Three months.

Keith: “And Yehovah blessed Obed-Edom and all of his household.” [applause] Whoo! Listen to me. This man’s minding his own business. He’s not even an Israelite. He’s a Gittite, somebody say “Gittite”.

Audience: Gittite.

Keith: There’s another famous Gittite, his name was Goliath of Gat. Goliath was, somebody say “Gittite”.

Audience: Gittite.

Keith: And there’s Obed-Edom the Gittite. Goliath the Gittite decided to fight the name. Can I get an amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: Goliath the Gittite decided to curse the God of David. Can I get an amen?

Audience: Amen.

Keith: But Obed-Edom the Gittite said, “Name? Come on in.” [applause] You all don’t get this. I’m going to try to end this quick. “And the ark remained in the house...” Woah. And the Ark...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: “...remained in the house of Obed-Edom the Gittite for three months and Yehovah blessed Obed-Edom and all of his household.” Now, what Obed-Edom could have said was this, “I had a vision, I had a dream, I had an experience.” But you know what we find if we read the Tanakh, the Bible that Yeshua read? We find out why the house of Obed-Edom was blessed. Can I slow down?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: Can I back up?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: Can I wipe the sweat off my head?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: Can I take my jacket off?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: Oh, somebody’s got to listen to the next part. If we open the Bible back to the Torah, we find this verse. Do you see what it says?

Audience: Yes.

Keith: Then why ain’t there revival in this house? You all ain’t reading what it says. Here’s what it says. In some places in Israel...

Audience: No! Everywhere!

Keith: Only with King David in his house.

Audience: No!

Keith: If you’re riding the right denomination...

Audience: No.

Keith: It says, “In every place that I cause My name to be mentioned.” Every English Bible will say, “To be remembered, to be thought of,” but the Jewish Publication Society got it right, according to the Bible that Yeshua read. For the Hebrew word that is used for mention means not only mentioning or remembering with your mind, but mentioning with your mouth. “In every place I cause My name to be mentioned, I will come to you and bless you.” Can you imagine? [applause]

You guys are with me, right there. You all understand what I’m going through. You understand what I’m saying. The Bible says this: “In every place I cause My name to be mentioned I Myself will come to your house. [applause] And I Myself will bless you.” Now, I could get so controversial. I don’t want to get controversial. Let me be nice. Obed-Edom was probably sitting in his house, minding his own business. David and the group had gone. He had the Ark which was...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: ...in his house. And being a good Gittite, maybe a little boastful, like Goliath. Somebody came to him and said, “Obed-Edom.” “Yes?” “What was all that ruckus over by your house last week?” Maybe some of the neighbors said, “Did you hear about Obed-Edom?” “No.” “He brought this object into his house.” And then can you hear Obed-Edom? “What do they call it, Obed-Edom?” “Yehovah.” [laughter]

Alright, you all didn’t like that. “What do they call it, Obed-Edom?” “Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey.” Now, I’m going to tell you a secret. Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey is not mentioning His name. Saying the four consonants is not mentioning His name. That is the politically correct thing to do when you have different people with different ideas. You just give them the four consonants. But, you see, Obed-Edom knew that the Ark, which was...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: ...he knew how to call it. So guess what Obed-Edom did? What do they name it? And he called out the name.

Audience: Yehovah!

Keith: Now, have a seat, because I’m almost done. You all, here’s what happened to me and Nehemia in Smithfield, North Carolina. As I’m talking about this, we both realized something. The Gittite got it right. Oh, you didn’t hear me now. The Gittite got it right. When the name showed up, the Gittite opened the door and said, “Come on in.” The Israelite in that situation got it wrong, until someone told David the king, “Have you heard about Obed-Edom the Gittite?” David, being a good Jew, heard about the blessing that fell upon Obed-Edom the Gittite, and David said, “Oh no, the Gittite got it right and I’m going to get it right.” [applause] The Bible says that David decided, “Hey you all, get the shofar, get the dancers, get the singers, get the cart. We’re going to…” somebody say “Obed-Edom’s house”.

Audience: Obed-Edom’s house.

Keith: The Bible says that Obed-Edom was minding his own business for three months. Everything he had was blessed. His coming was blessed, his going was blessed. His wife was blessed, his children were blessed. His money was blessed, his house was blessed. Somebody say “everything”.

Audience: Everything. [applause]

Keith: And then David heard about it, and said, “You know what? I’m not that angry. [laughter] I’m not that afraid.” And what Nehemia Gordon the Israelite has done, he has given the information to the Gittite, and now we both got it right. [applause]

And you know what he’s going to do now? My Jewish brother caused me to get the information and the inspiration, and he probably will never confess this, but as he saw me go forward even without his help, he got a little bit where he thought, “Wait a minute, is it right for the Gittite to have all the fun? I’m an Israelite!” [laughter]

And why am I excited about this? Let me tell you why I’m excited about this. Oh my goodness, I messed up the slide, Nehemia. No, that’s okay. You guys, everything I have is gone. It’s gone. Somebody say “amen”.

Audience: Amen.

Keith: I’m telling you, I’m looking at it - it ain’t there. The rest of my slides are done. The same thing that happened to Nehemia just happened to me! I need a witness. I need one witness. Nehemia, come and look and see if the slides are gone. Are the slides gone? No, I’m telling you. Are my slides gone? No, you want to fix it. No, you can’t fix this, Nehemia. Go sit down. Go sit down! [laughter] I don’t need the slides right now, because I can tell this story.

God has decided to reveal His name in this hour. [applause] God has decided to use Obed-Edom the Gittite if He has to, to get it right. Goliath the Gittite got it wrong, and he ended up face on the floor with the rock, the Migdal Oz in his forehead. But then there was a second chance for another Gittite, and he got it right. [applause]

You all, I’ve taken enough of your time, but I need to do something. I need to read something. I don’t have the slide. If I get it wrong... Nehemia, please. Oh, great gadol moreh... Do me a favor, I don’t need it. You all know what gadol moreh means? Moreh gadol, I’m sorry. He’ll correct me on this. He’s a great teacher, you all. Do you know, this guy was probably one of the toughest teachers I’ve ever had? For a period of years he made me sit down - Alef, Bet, Gimel, Dalet, Hey. Learn the consonants, learn the vowels, learn the accents, learn the Masoretic notes. And then the guy puts me in a situation - brings me to a synagogue and they say, “Oh great, moreh gadol, Nehemia Gordon, will you read the Torah scroll?” And he says, “I’d like my student to do it.” Somebody say “holy ghost”.

Audience: Holy ghost.

Keith: They opened up the scroll and let Obed-Edom the Gittite [applause] get it right, and Nehemia said, “I’ll take it from there.” I was doing such a great job, and Nehemia said, “I’ll step in now.” [laughter] And guess what? That is exactly what I want to happen. The revival that will take place will start with the Jew. [applause] Hey, listen to me. I don’t get invited to my own Methodist churches, and I don’t care. I don’t ever need to speak again after today. Because if my friend Nehemia Gordon stays in the spirit, the Ruakh HaKodesh, the spirit that I see that is indwelling in him, revival will break out. [applause] I’m so appreciative to Michael, I’m so appreciative to Judith, I’m so appreciative to this ministry. And I’m especially appreciative to my friend, Nehemia Gordon, that when I said to him, “Nehemia, you and I will be friends,” and he said, “No, we will not.” [laughter] “Nehemia, you will teach me to read my Torah in its original language, history and context.” And the great teacher said, “No, I will not.” You see, Nehemia is used to shutting doors. [applause] And you can “ooh” all you want, but there’s a whole lot of you that can shut them better than him.

The great thing about Nehemia is that he opened the door for me. I don’t care that his father says I do not count. I don’t care if those in the Karaite movement say I do not count. I don’t care if the Methodists, Messianics and everybody else that’s messed up says I don’t count. [laughter] He knows I count. [applause]

I’m not going to try to impress you by reading it from the Hebrew. I’m not going to give you the Hebrew words, unless I get caught up in the Holy Ghost. Zechariah chapter 8 in closing, verse 23. “Thus sayeth Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey - Yahweh, that have not yet read the book, “Yehovah” - according to my Jewish Hebrew scholar – “Tzeva’ot. In those days, ten men from all of the nations will khazak- in strength. They will grab ahold of the garment, of the ish Yehudi - the Jewish man.” And this is what they will say, according to the prophet Zechariah: “We shall go with you, for we have heard that Elohim is with you.” Nehemia, if you are willing to hang out with some of us who maybe don’t count according to the tradition of your father, if you’re willing to keep the door open beyond just the information, but the inspiration. We heard that the Creator of the universe picked you, and what the Hebrew Bible says, it doesn’t say you singular, it says you plural.

Let me say something. I heard, according to the Bible that I read, that God is still with His people. [applause] And so when I’m in the Old City of Jerusalem, sometimes they won’t talk to me in Hebrew. “Shalom, ma shlomkha?” They’re like, “Speak English, we know you’re an American.” Sometimes they won’t let me in their circle. Sometimes they do things and say things that hurt my feelings. But I heard that the Creator of the universe is with you. And I want to know, as I’m looking in the camera, as I’m looking at you, and as I’m looking at you, can I go with you? Now, here we go, you all. Nehemia said this: “If I ever get another chance, I’m going to keep the door open.” [applause] And people around the world are just hoping that Nehemia Gordon will one day stand up and proclaim - before the Messiah comes - that Yeshua is Messiah. I simply want Nehemia to do what I believe the Creator of the universe is calling him to do - keep the door open. [applause] Lest you confuse my words - not keep the door open so that Yeshua can come in. Keep the door open so that the name of the One who is the Creator of the universe can take over His people’s house. [applause]

I’m going to tell you a secret. If you ask the rabbis, they know the Gittite’s proclaiming the name right. They’re just hoping that the Israelites don’t hear about it, because Eli and his religious group have already determined that they’re going to do something that is opposite the word of God. Because of fear, because of anger, because of circumstance, they have taken the name that can bring blessing to the entire household away from His people, so He said, “I need to knock on the Israelite’s door again. I know a man, I come to him about eight or nine. I’m wondering, if that man, if I knock again, will he open the door and take his information, take the inspiration and tell My people it’s time to get it right?”

Now, Smithfield, North Carolina. Oh! Somebody say “lightning strikes twice”.

Audience: Lightning strikes twice.

Keith: Oh, I feel the Holy Spirit. The spirit of God just touched me. So what we’re going to do is we’re going to make this easy. You all, do me a favor, stand up and turn toward the wall. I want you to imagine that the Creator of the universe is knocking on the door to your house. And He’s saying, “Hey Gittite, you want to get it right?” I wonder. While we’re looking away from me... It’s not me. In fact, I’ll run off the stage. I’m wondering if the Ruakh HaKodesh hasn’t been preparing some people all weekend long for the Smithfield revival revisited. That there are people that are here that are ready to be ambassadors of His name. There are people in this room that are ready to tell the world, against tradition, against the spirit of Eli, the religious authority and the spiritual border patrol, “I am going to get it right because the name has knocked on my door at Shavuot in Dallas, where He said, ‘Anokhi Yehovah Elohekha,’ ‘I am Yehovah your God, and you shall have no other god in my face!’”

So I want to go to the toughest situation in the room. Everybody’s looking towards the wall. I want to ask my friend Nehemia Gordon, if there’s anything I have said today that is outside of Tanakh. Nehemia, anything outside of Tanakh?

Nehemia: No.

Keith: Is there anything that I’ve said that offends you as a Jew?

Nehemia: No.

Keith: Are you ready, Nehemia, again, to open the door to the One who has a plan for your life that is going to change the world? Not Christianity, not the Messianic movement. You can just stay right where you are as a Karaite. You just stay right where you are. Are you ready to be like David? Oh, you said that you come from a place where there’s David in your line. Most of David’s relatives have said, “Stay away from the Ark, which is...”

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: Nehemia, will you take the Ark home with you?

Nehemia: Yes.

Keith: Come here. Now I’m going to ask a more difficult question. Forget about pronunciation for a moment. Other people that are here that would say this, “I don’t have all the answers, but I’m willing to be in the process of getting them. I am willing to cry out to my heavenly Father, and I am willing to stand alongside an Israelite that’s got it right.”

Don’t move. Don’t do anything. Because, you all, what I need you to do right now is pray. I need you to pray right now. The spirit of God is calling some new Michaels and some new Keiths and some new Judiths and some new Nehemias right here at Shavuot. There are people that are listening to this right now that are being arrested, they can’t move. The Ruakh HaKodesh is doing it again, and he’s starting with my Jewish brother and saying, “Yes, I will not shut the door again.”

Karen, I want you to come. No manipulation, you all. Just stay praying, and as you pray, I want you to imagine that the Ruakh HaKodesh, the spirit of God, the very breath of God, is ready to blow on you. Let it blow now.

Karen: We love you. [Singing].

Keith: My goodness, here comes the spirit. Does anybody’s head feel hot right now, like the tongue of fire? I’m here, but I know something’s happening to me right now. Is there anybody that says, “My head is even feeling hot like a tongue of fire”? Don’t stay in your place of comfort. Turn away from the wall. Come on down here, quickly now. Hurry up. Don’t worry about nobody. Hurry up! Nobody’s looking at you. The Holy Spirit is touching someone back there, I see it. Stay there if you want, but if your feet can’t help it, move from your place of comfort. He’s here. Living. Is there anybody that says, “I’m desperate for Him”? Hallelujah! Those of you that are standing, looking toward the wall, do me a favor. Get on your knees. Just get on your knees out there. Everybody else stay standing. Oh, I’m lost without you. Hallelujah. If you’re desperate, say it.

Those that are out there that are kneeling, you all here that are standing with my brother, get closer, now. My goodness, get closer. We in Dallas, get closer. You all, I just want to do one last thing. Those that are kneeling, stay kneeling, you keep praying. But there’s a verse... and help me with this. In Numbers chapter 10 it says that when the Ark which was...

Audience: Called by the name.

Keith: ...was ready to set forth, Moses would stand up and he would call the name and he would say, “Arise Yehovah, and let your enemies be scattered.” Sister Karen, I know you’re here. Where are you, Karen? Come here, real quickly. You all, I promise you, just stay kneeling. Michael, do I have a few more moments? Come here, Karen. You all, if we could just do something. Those that are kneeling and those that are standing. I’m going to do something after we do this. Karen, We Exalt You. Can you sing We Exalt You?

Karen: [singing] We exalt you.

Keith: Open your voice, open your mouth.

Karen: We exalt you.

Keith: Oh, hallelujah. Come here, Judith. Hallelujah. Come on, now. Come on, you all, let’s exalt Him. Come on, for the world, now.

Now, you all, we have come to the end of our time at Shavuot. But we now have ambassadors of His name that have come and said, “We will be like Obed-Edom. We will receive His name into our houses with its holiness, with its accountability, and we will also be people that will proclaim His name to the world.”

Audience: Yes!

Keith: Now, I want to say in closing. Yehovah, arise, and let Your enemies be scattered. [Shofar]. Oh, somebody felt something deep in their gut. Just tell them, “Okay, I’m opening the door, too.” [Shofar]. The last days are here. There are more than ten that have grabbed a hold of the skirt, the suit jacket, the tzitzit of the Jew. Now He is getting ready to do something that the nations will begin to proclaim His name.

Audience: Yes! Hallelujah! [applause]

Keith: And now a closing prayer. And I need my Jewish brother Nehemia to come and set God’s name on you.

Nehemia: This is the priestly blessing, Numbers chapter 6. Yevarekhekha Yehovah veyishmerekha. Ya’er Yehovah panav elekha viykhuneka. Yisa Yehovah panav elekha veyasem lekha shalom. Yehovah bless you and keep you. Yehovah shine His face towards you and be gracious towards you. Yehovah lift His face towards you and give you peace. And they shall place My name upon the children of Israel, and I will bless them.

Keith: …are blessed.

Audience: Amen!

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Opening the Door with Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series – Part 5)

In Part 5 of the Open Door Series, Nehemia Gordon teaches on the name that is the source of all blessing and at the heart of the Priestly Blessing. Gordon explains the literal meaning of God’s personal name and the power inherent in its uniqueness. With accounts from the lives of Abraham and David, he addresses the problems of ambiguity and syncretism (the spiritual mixing of seed) that arise when only the titles of God are used. Gordon discusses the great unlikeliness of the Smithfield revival and reveals a 30-year secret about a shut door — and his commitment to not shut the door again.

Transcript

Opening the Door with Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series - Part 5)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Nehemia: I'm gonna talk to you today about the Priestly Blessing, or the Priestly Benediction. It's a section that appears in Numbers 6. It's the blessing that God teaches to Aaron and his descendants to place upon the children of Israel.

And here, we have actually a photograph of the oldest biblical passage that's been preserved ever discovered. It's written on a silver scroll that was discovered in a cave in Jerusalem. It's actually on display at the Israel Museum and it contains the Priestly Blessing from Numbers 6. So, this is the oldest surviving fragment of a biblical text.

And of course, you know, Moses wrote the Torah around 1,500 BC, give or take a couple of hundred years, and that was copied, and copies of that were made, and copies of that were made. But we don't have the one that Moses wrote in his own hand. We have the copies, of the copies, of the copies. And this is a fragment of the oldest copy written on a silver scroll. And this is, I think, a really profound and important passage, Numbers chapter 6. Here, it says in verses 22-27, in the Hebrew, it says, “And Yehovah spoke to Moses saying, ‘Speak to Aaron and his sons saying, Thus shall you bless the children of Israel, say to them,’” and we have a three-line blessing, one line in each verse, verse 23 on.

It says, “May Yehovah bless you and keep you. May Yehovah shine His face towards you and be gracious towards you. May Yehovah lift His face towards you and give you peace.” It's a three-line blessing, and in each line to the blessing it has the four-letter name of the Creator of the universe, of our Heavenly Father, Yehovah. Some people say “Yahweh,” I pronounce it “Yehovah,” we've explained that. But three times it has this name Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, once in each line in the blessing. And then he concludes in verse 27, He says, “And they shall place My name upon the children of Israel, and I will bless them.” That's what it literally says in Hebrew. Placing the name upon Israel, speaking the name over Israel, invoking the name over Israel. That is what the Priests were commanded to do in order to bless the people.

I think this is a powerful thing. I grew up hearing this. Every feast day we would have the Kohanim, the direct descendants of Aaron through their father's line, would come to the front of the synagogue, and they would spread out their hands and cover themselves in talit, and they will proclaim this blessing. But they didn't proclaim it in the name. They proclaimed it with a replacement of the name, with the title, “Adonay,” which is “Lord,” and that's a Jewish tradition I talked about yesterday. It goes back about 1,800 years, maybe a little longer.

But here in scripture it was intended to be spoken with the name. And what's really exciting about this is the Rabbis who forbid speaking the name today, who say, “Whenever you see that name, read it as ‘Lord,’ as ‘Adonay,’” they actually say in their writings that when it comes to this blessing, originally, it was to be spoken with the name. There, they say there's no dispute, that in the Temple it was spoken with the name. And they say, “When the Temple will be rebuilt, it must only be spoken with the name.”

And here's a quote from the Babylonian Talmud. They're quoting the verse that says, “Thus shall you bless the children of Israel...” and they say it means with the explicit name. When Jews say, "The explicit name,” they mean the name “Yehovah,” Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey. Say, “Yud.”

Crowd: Yud.

Nehemia: Hey.

Crowd: Hey.

Nehemia: Vav.

Crowd: Vav.

Nehemia: Hey.

Crowd: Hey.

Nehemia: That is the explicit name. And it goes on, and the other Rabbis come and they say, “Is it really with the explicit name or with the title?” They can't believe this. “How can it really be with the explicit name? We don't use that in everyday speech anymore, we’ve banned the name.” They explain, “Scripture says, ‘And they shall place My name, which means, My name which is unique to Me.’” It has to be “My name,” not a title. Those titles aren't names. He only has one name. And you could actually check this for yourselves. In fact, I encourage you to do so. Go to your Bible in Hebrew, the Old Testament, and look at the word "name.” In Hebrew, the word “Shem,” say, “Shem.”

Crowd: Shem.

Nehemia: Whenever it refers to the Shem, the name of the God of Israel, He only has one name. He has many descriptions, and they're beautiful descriptions, but only one unique name. And there's power in that unique name, and I don't mean a magical incantation. Some people get really caught up on the exact pronunciation. I think that pronunciation is important, but it's not a magical incantation where if I don't say it exactly this way, we're not going to get the blessing. That's not what it's about.

You know, my grandmother was an old lady... Well, I guess at one time she was a young lady. She was born in Lithuania, came over the United States in the 1920s and lived most of her life in Chicago. But she never lost her Eastern European accent. So, she's living most of her life in Chicago, and one day in the 1980s she's in a traffic accident. She gets rear ended. It was his fault. She gets out of the car, being a true Chicagoan, and she starts yelling at the guy. And he's yelling back at her, and at one point in this exchange he yells at her, he says, “You blank foreigner…” He doesn't say, “Blank.” He uses a cuss word, a four-letter word, but not the name of God.

And she’s telling me this story. Later, she's sitting in our kitchen and she's telling us this story, and she's so upset that this happened. And she puts her forehead in her hand, and she says, “Vhat made him tink I'm a foreigner?” And, you know, some people get really caught up on, is it “Yehovah” or “Yahoowa” or “Yahoowehi” or “Yahweh?” And I think it's important to try to get the truth and know how to pronounce it. But if God thinks I'm a foreigner because I pronounce it the way I pronounce it, I'm okay with that. I'm gonna do the best I can, and I don't think He expects anything more from us than to do the best that we can. And it's through His grace and mercy, that even if we mispronounce His name, He's gonna accept it. You know, my name is Nehemia, say, “Nehemia.”

Crowd: Nehemia.

Nehemia: Now, some of you were able to pronounce that. Some of you said it as “Nehemia.” Some people call me “Neheemia” or “Nehamaya.” And I'm fine with all of those names, as long as you don't call me “Baldy.” It’s a very sensitive issue. And I think it's the same with the Creator of the universe. As long as we do our best and turn our hearts towards heaven, and call upon His name, even if we mispronounce that name, I believe He will accept it. Can I get an Amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Nehemia: Now, let's talk about some of these titles. The Rabbis mention there, He's got the unique name and He's got the titles. And that unique name is unique to Him, nobody else can be called “Yehovah.” The titles are different. One of those titles is “Elohim.” Say, “Elohim.”

Crowd: Elohim.

Nehemia: Elohim is a perfectly good title. It appears hundreds of times. Actually, it's nearly 2,000 times in the Tanakh, referring to the God of Israel, and it can be translated as “great God.” But the thing is, other gods can be called Great Gods. And in the Tanakh itself, there are other gods who are called “Elohim,” in the Old Testament. We have our Elohim and their Elohim. “Adonay,” we usually translate this as “Lord.” More literally it's, “My great Lord.” And other gods can be called “Lord,” can't they? “El Elyon,” “most high God.” “El Shaday,” these are great titles. El Shaday is not a name, by the way, it's a title. It means “mighty One, my great protective spirit,” that's a literal translation of it. Other gods, other spirits could even be called that, “El Shaday.” Now, what's unique about the God of Israel is His unique name. And it appears in the Tanakh, “Yehovah” or “Yahweh,” 6,828 times. Say “6,000.”

Crowd: 6,000.

Nehemia: 800.

Crowd: 800.

Nehemia: And 28 times.

Crowd: And 28 times.

Nehemia: That's a lot. Now, we have the abbreviated poetical form, “Yah.” And actually, properly, it's not “Yah,” and that's like in “Halleluyah.” It's “Yuh” Say, “Yuh.”

Crowd: Yuh.

Nehemia: It’s not “Yakh-heh,” it’s “Yuh.” Yuh, and they still said, “Yuh.” But it’s okay. It's okay that you're a foreigner, no problem. Yuh. It appears 49 times altogether, His unique name. And that's kind of like, I don't know, calling somebody named Michael, “Mickey.” It's a term of love and endearment for our Heavenly Father, altogether 6,877 times. That's more than Elohim, Adonay, El Shaday, El Elyon, El, Eloah and all the other titles combined, His personal name. That's an important thing. What does that personal name mean? His personal name, we actually get an explanation from Him in Exodus 3:14.

Exodus 3:14, He says to Moses, “I am that which I am.” And He says, “Thus shall you say to children Israel, ‘I am has sent me to you.’” Is His name "I am" or is His name Yahweh, Yehovah? Which one is it? And you might not know reading it in English, but in Hebrew, the phrase "I am" is actually one Hebrew word, the word, “eheyeh. Say, “eheyeh.”

Crowd: Eheyeh.

Nehemia:Eheyeh” literally translated, is, “I will be, I am, and I will be.” In Hebrew it's a continual action, what's called the imperfect. I won't get into the technical explanation, but essentially it means, “I am and I will continue to be.” And His name, Yehovah, is a Hebrew verb, a combination of three forms of the Hebrew verb, which means, “He was, He is, and He shall continue to be.” So, He refers to Himself as, “I am and I will continue to be,” but we refer to Him as “He that was, He that is, and He that will continue to be.”

Crowd: Amen.

Nehemia: That's what His name means. Now, those three forms of the verb that together make Yehovah are hayah, which is the past tense, he was. Say, “Hayah.”

Crowd: Hayah.

Nehemia: And the present tense hoveh, He that is, say, “Hoveh.”

Crowd: Hoveh.

Nehemia: And yihiyeh, He that is and will continue to be, say, “Yihiyeh.”

Crowd: Yihiyeh.

Nehemia: Hayah, hoveh, yihiyeh together is “Yehovah.” Now, I'm going to ask Karen to stand up and sing that. No, I won't do that. That's Keith shtick. All right, let's move on here.

One of the really powerful things about His name, referring to the One that was, the One that is, and the One that always shall be, is that if you call Him by that name, Yehovah, by His personal name, the name He tells us that is His name forever, you can avoid ambiguity. And let's think about this. If you're speaking to a Hindu from India and you say to that man, “I believe in God,” and he says, “I also believe in God.” Are you talking about the same God?

Crowd: No.

Nehemia: I don't know, maybe you are. It's arguable. They have many Gods, one of those might be the same as ours. I don't know, I'm not an expert on Hinduism. And if you say, “I believe in the God who created the heaven and the earth,” and he says, “I also believe in the God who created the heaven and the earth,” are we talking about the same God? Maybe, maybe not, I don't know.

This is something that I know is very hotly debated. If we speak to a Muslim and we say, “I believe in the God of Abraham.” He says, “I also believe in the God of Ibrahim.” Is that the same God? And that's something that people will disagree with and argue about. But if you say, “I believe in Yehovah, I believe in Yahweh, I believe in the Creator of heaven and earth, who is called, ‘He that was, He that is, and He that will be,’” and we give His personal name, there's no question of who we're talking about.

And we could actually learn this from Abraham, our forefather, who originally was called “Avram.” When he meets the King of Sodom, he uses the name “Yehovah” to cut through all the ambiguity. Now, this is one of my favorite stories, it's Genesis 14. I love this story, ‘cause I go down to the Dead Sea whenever I have a chance. It's one of my favorite places in the world.

And I look across the plane of the Dead Sea that at one time we're told was full of water. It was a very lush place. It was essentially like a rain forest, like the Olympic Peninsula in Washington. And now, it's one of the driest places on earth. Literally, one of the driest places on earth. And it actually says there, it's interesting how it describes it in Genesis. It says it was like the “Garden of Elohim,” the garden of God, meaning Eden, and it says, “And like the land of Egypt,” ‘cause the image for an Israelite of a place where there was always perpetual water throughout the year, that's Egypt. Israel is not like Egypt. Israel doesn't have perpetual water throughout the year. We're dependent upon rain from God.

And it tells us in Deuteronomy that God's eyes are upon the land of Israel throughout the year. And through his rain, He's expressing His grace towards us, His mercy towards us, ‘cause we couldn't live for a single year if we didn't have that blessing of the rain. In Egypt, they always have water. They have the river that perpetually flows through the land. And Israel is not like that. Israel is a desert country that's dependent upon the rain.

So, you look across the plane of the Dead Sea, where if you're lucky, it rains two or three times a year. And you think back, thousands of years ago this place was like the garden of Elohim, like the land of Egypt, and now it's dry as could be when God overturned Sodom and Gomorrah. But back when it was this lush garden, five Kings invaded the Land of Israel. They came from the land of Shinar, which today is Iraq, and eastern Turkey. And they came into the land... Excuse me, four Kings, and they attacked the five Kings. And I always thought that was a weird story. How did the four Kings defeat the five Kings? The five were more than the four. But I guess they had better tactics, and maybe they even had more people, even though they were fewer kings. They capture all this property and all the people from the five Kings, and they take them back to Iraq and eastern Turkey.

Abraham hears about this and he's very upset. Now, why is Abraham upset? Because Lot, his nephew, is among the captives who've been taken. They've taken property, and people, who they're going to then take to Iraq and sell as slaves. And Abraham hears about this and he mobilizes his army, his men, 318 men he has, and he goes after them. He descends upon them in the night, and he liberates all the people who have been taken and he brings them back.

And on the way back, everyone's coming out. They want to greet Abraham, they want to praise him, they want to love on him. They say, “Abraham, you're the greatest. We want a piece of this. How are we gonna get a piece of this? We want to be next to you. We want to bless you, because we could see that God has blessed you.” And one of the people who comes out to bless him is a man named Melchizedek. Malkitzedek, which means, “My righteous King.” And we're told that Melchizedek, Malkitzedek, he blesses Abraham, and his blessing’s a really interesting statement. It appears in Genesis 14:19. It says, “And Melchizedek blessed him and said, ‘Blessed is Avram by the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth.’”

Now, Melchizedek, we're told, is a Priest of the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth, and he's a righteous man. As an archetype he's later mentioned in Psalm 110. So, Melchizedek is okay, he's kosher. When he says, “The Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth,” it's not like speaking to that Indian. I know that he's speaking about the same God as I worship.

Now, one of the things about the Canaanites is they also worshipped a God called “El Elyon,” the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth. Uh-oh. And their God, they believed, created the universe, and when He was done creating the universe, he retired. He went to what's called the “Mountain of the North,” sat in his palace, and turned over the ruling of the universe to his children. And his children fought it out. And eventually, his son, the son of the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth, whose name was Ba'al... In English you say “Bale,” but his name was Ba'al, which means, “The Lord.” He became the ruler of the physical universe, while his father was sleeping and resting on the Mountain of the North. And if you were an ancient Canaanite, you didn't pray to the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth. What Melchizedek did was scandalous in the land of Canaan. You didn't pray to the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth, ‘cause he was retired. You prayed to his son, Ba'al.

And Avram meets Melchizedek, and he says, “Okay, I’ve got no problem with you.” But then, the King of Sodom shows up, and Avram gets really nervous, because he says, “If I use, out of respect, the same terms that Melchizedek used, and refer to the ‘Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth,’ the King of Sodom might think I'm talking about his God, the father of Ba'al, the father of their Lord.” And so, Avram decides, “I'm going to use those terms that Melchizedek used out of respect, but I'm going to take back the terms that the Canaanites have usurped. I'm going to restore these terms that have been taken over by this idolatrous faith.”

And what does Avraham say in verses 21-22? It says, “And Avraham said to the King of Sodom...” and here now, the King of Sodom wants to bless Avraham. He says, “I'll give you all of the property, just give me the people back.” Avram says, “I lift my hand to Yehovah, the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth.” He uses the exact same terms as Melchizedek, but he adds the name, because when you're speaking with a Sodomite, you need to be clear of who we're talking about. The King of Sodom could be talking about anybody. Avram cuts through that and uses the name. He uses the name to avoid that ambiguity.

Now, one of the powerful things about using this name versus only using the titles, and the titles are beautiful, wonderful, “El Shaday” and “El Elyon,” and “Elohim,” use them all the time and pray with those names, those titles, there’s nothing wrong with them. But if you use those only and not the unique name, then you end up with what I was taught was called at the university, “syncretism.” Say, “Syncretism.”

Crowd: Syncretism.

Nehemia: Syncretism is this big, fancy word. It's like when you sync your iPod with your computer, your iPod has half the songs, and your computer has half the songs, and you sync them, and you get the full set of songs. You get the original songs from the iPod with those added songs from the computer. And when you sync the faith of Israel with the pagan faith, you get the true songs mixed in with the false songs. And this is what I call… I don't like using this big term, “syncretism,” this is what I call “spiritual mixing of seed.” We have a commandment here in Leviticus 19:19. It says, “You shall keep My statutes. You shall not let your livestock breed with another kind. You shall not sow your field with mixed seed.” What does that mean, to sow your field with mixed seed?

Now, the Rabbis came to this verse and they said, “This doesn't make any sense, because when you let your livestock breed with another kind, what you're talking about is taking a horse, and letting it breed with a donkey, and you end up with a mule. But if you take seed...” and when scripture talks about sowing the field with seed, it's talking about grain. It's not talking about pumpkin seeds, it means grain. And if you take barley and you mix it with a seed of wheat, you don't end up with “warley” or “beets.” You know, there's no such thing. And so, the Rabbis looked at this and they said, “Well, it doesn't really mean mixing seed, what it means is grafting. You're not allowed to take from an apple tree and graft it onto a pear tree.” That's what they understood.

But if we literally take what it says about mixing seed, why is God forbidding us to do this? Is this just some arbitrary commandment? And I guess we could say that, but the explanation many scholars give is that sowing your field with mixed seed, mixing the wheat and planting it in the same field as the barley, produces a mixed crop. You end up with a field where half the grain is wheat and half is barley, and they're completely intermingled. And back in ancient times, they didn't have centrifuges. There was no way to separate out the wheat from the barley.

Well, who cares, right? What's the problem with that? The problem is, you go to the marketplace to sell that wheat, which is the most valuable crop in ancient Israel, and it's mixed in with barley, which is the least valuable crop in ancient Israel. And you're presenting that wheat as if it's pure wheat, but it's mixed seed. It's wheat mixed with barley. And the problem with sowing your field with mixed seed is, it's deceptive, it leads to deception. And that's what the deceiver does. He passes off on us mixed seed. He doesn't come to us and say, “Here's something completely different. Here's barley, eat this. This is less valuable grain.” He says, “Here's the wheat. It's so valuable, it's so nourishing, eat it.” And you eat it and it's not wheat. It's wheat mixed with barley. That's what mixed seed is about.

That's what the deceiver does. If you want to hand off this large cache of counterfeit money, and you want to pass it off, what do you do? You mix it in with the real money, to where people can't tell the difference. If you say, “Here's the stack of money, and it's all counterfeit,” someone's gonna pick up on that. If you mix it in with the true stuff, they won't be able to distinguish. And when you make counterfeit money, what does it look like? Is it purple, purple $100 bills? It looks like the real thing. That's what the deceiver does. He gives us a counterfeit faith.

Hoshea chapter 2:16 talks about how the Israelites were practicing mixed seed, they were sowing a mixed faith. It says in 2:16, in the Hebrew, it's verse 18, “’It shall come to pass on that day,’ says Yehovah, ‘You shall call me my husband and you shall no longer call me my husband.’” That's a literal translation of what it says. And when you look at it, literally, it makes absolutely no sense. And that's why your Bibles, and most of your English translations don't translate it literally. They don't translate the two different words that mean, “My husband.” The two words are, “Ishy,” say, “Ishy.”

Crowd: Ishy.

Nehemia:Ish” means husband, “-y” means mine. Together,” ishy” is “my husband.” And that's what God says we should call Him. He's acknowledging there's a covenant relationship between the God of Israel and the people of Israel. He's our Father, and as a nation, He's our husband and we are the bride. It says, “And you shall no longer call me “ba'ali,” “my ba'al.” Now, what's going on here? What's going on is that “ba'al” which means “Lord, the son of the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth,” also means “husband.” And what the Israelites were saying is, “We have this covenant relationship. The true God, Yehovah, is our husband, and the God of the Canaanites is also their ba'al, their husband. Ba'al, Yehovah, that's the same thing.” That's what they were doing. They were mixing seed, spiritually mixing seed. Calling Yehovah, “Ba'al.”

Now, that's significant, because I was always taught... Let's read the next verse. It says, “And I will remove the names of the ba'als from her mouth, and they shall no longer mention them by name.” They were calling upon the God of Israel as “Ba'al. That's profound, that blew me away when I learned that, because I was always taught that idolatry would be this foreign thing, something completely different, something that would look like a purple $100 bill. It would be Ganesh. You know who Ganesh is? He's that Indian God with all the arms and the big elephant trunk. I mean, no Jew in his right mind is going to worship Ganesh. You'd have to be brain dead to do that. I mean, come on. It's an elephant, for God's sake. What are you doing worshipping an elephant? I mean, I think of the line in The Simpsons where... what's the guy's name? Apu. Keith is saying, “Don't say that, Nehemia,” where Apu says to Mr. Simpson, “Please stop feeding my God peanuts.” Like, really, you're gonna feed your God peanuts? Who's gonna worship that?

But that's not what the deceiver does. He doesn't bring you Ganesh, because he knows you're not going to fall for Ganesh. He brings you something that looks like the real thing, that has some of the truth mixed in it. And then that's how he deceives us.

And that's what happened to the Israelites. They didn't just go and worship some completely foreign God that had nothing to do with their God. They worshipped Ba'al as if he was Yehovah. And they said, “Ba'al and Yehovah, that's the same God. He's the husband, he's the master,” etc. It turns out there was even a King of Israel named after Ba'al. Who was that King? He's mentioned 2 Samuel 2:10. It says, “Ishbosheth, son of Saul, was 40 years old and began to reign over Israel, and he reigned for two years.” Well, where does it mention a King of Israel named after Ba'al? Ishbosheth. “Ish” means “man,” we just saw that, husband or man. “Boshet” means shame. “Ishbosheth,” “Man of shame.” His friends didn't call him “Ishbosheth.” His real name appears in 1 Chronicles 8:33-34. “And Ner begat Kish, and Kish begat Saul, and Saul begat Jonathan, Malkishua and Avinadav, and Esh Ba'al, man of Ba'al.” He was the King of Israel who took over the 11 tribes after the death of Saul, his father, and he was named after Ba'al.

And he's not the only one. King David, the one anointed by Yehovah. You know how you say "anointed one" in Hebrew? “Mashiakh.” He was the Mashiakh, the Messiah. Not the one we're expecting in the end time, that will be his descendant. But he was anointed of Yehovah. Every legitimate King of Israel is anointed with oil, and sits on the throne, and rules as a flesh and blood King. David was a Mashiakh, he's called that in the Tanakh. And we're told that… Well, actually, this is a quote from the Talmud that I'm bringing here. This is what I was always taught about David. I was taught “Anyone who says that David sinned is in error.” Say, “Error.”

Crowd: Error.

Nehemia: “As it is written, ‘And David was wise in all his ways, and Yehovah was with him.” Say, “With him.”

Crowd: With him.

Nehemia: This is what it says in Scripture. The Rabbis say, “Well, if we believe scripture, David never sinned, because Yehovah was with him.” They say, “Is it possible that David sinned when the Shekhina was with him?” Now, let me let you in on a secret. Shekhina, that's what you guys say, “Shekhina glory.” It's actually “Shekhinat kavod,” which means “the dwelling of honor.” And what it refers to specifically, Shekhina, that word doesn't exactly appear in the Tanakh. What appears is the word “leshaken, leshikhno,” which means “to cause to dwell.” And what dwells among us?

If you look in Scripture, you people refer to the Shekhina as the “Holy Spirit.” Well, we have in the Tanakh what dwells is Yehovah's name. It says, “He causes His name to dwell among us.” And so, it says, “How could David, who had the name of Yehovah, it was in him, it came into him. How could he possibly have sinned? He was wise in all his ways.” And they come with all the explanations. What was his biggest sin, the most obvious sin of David? Batsheva. Batsheva. He committed adultery with a married woman and got her pregnant. Well, she wasn't married, the Rabbis say. Why wasn't she married? Because the Israelites, when they would go off to war, it says in Deuteronomy 24 to divorce your wife, you have to give her a certificate of divorce. What happened if a man disappears in battle? She's what's called an “agunah,” say, “agunah.”

Crowd: Agunah.

Nehemia: This is actually a big problem in modern Israel among the Rabbis. If there's an Orthodox woman whose husband is missing in action, then she can never marry again. There's a woman in Israel just like that. Her husband, Ron Arad, was an Israeli pilot shot down during the First Lebanon War, and she's still married to him according to Israeli law and the Rabbis, even though everyone says he's dead. That's called an “agunah.”

And so, the Rabbis say, in ancient times, what they used to do is when they would go off to war, they would hand their wife a piece of parchment and it was a divorce. It was a provisional divorce that says, “Until I return, we are divorced, until I return and I'm with you again.” You know what I mean by “with you?” I won't say in front of the children. Well, therefore Batsheva was not married to Uriah, because he had given her the provisional divorce. This is what the Rabbis teach, some Rabbis, I should say.

And what about murdering Uriah? That was a sin, obviously. Well, no, Uriah deserved death, because David said to him, “Go and sleep at your home tonight in your bed, with your wife.” Now, why did David really say that to Uriah? To cover over his own crime. He'd gotten her pregnant and her husband had been away in battle for months. It would be obvious to everyone that Uriah wasn't the husband, if Uriah wasn't with his wife. So, according to the Rabbis, Uriah was worthy of death, ‘cause he didn't listen to the King's order to go back home. He said, “As long as the Ark of the Covenant of the God of Israel is in the field of battle, I will not go and sleep in my own bed,” and he refused to go.

So, according to the Rabbis, David was sinless. And you might think, “Oh, this is some obscure doctrine, no one really takes that seriously.” About 15 years ago, I remember in the Israeli Knesset, there was a secular Jew who stood up and said, “King David was a bully who stole another man's wife.” And you know what? He wasn't entirely wrong. David had character flaws. He wasn't perfect. In the Tanakh there's no one who's perfect. We learn from people's mistakes, not just from their righteous actions. Another Knesset member, the Israeli parliament, who is an ultra-Orthodox man, the big black hat, and the pe'ot and everything, the whole nine yards, he gets up and he says, “That's blasphemy. David never sinned. If you say that you are in error,” and he quoted this passage. This is not some ancient discussion that's been forgotten. There are people today who believe David was sinless.

I got a secret for you. David wasn't sinless. And not only was he not sinless, he was a spiritual seed mixer. It's interesting, not all the Rabbis accepted this explanation that David was sinless. There was another Rabbi who came along in the same passage, and he said, “Well, that Rabbi who said David was sinless, he overturns and seeks to interpret in David's favor, because he's descended from David.” Meaning, that particular Rabbi, whose name was Judah the Prince, he was a direct descendant of David on his father's side, and he wanted to clear his family name. So, he made up this explanation about how David didn't sin.

And I want to reveal something to you. You guys in the back won't hear this. I want to reveal something that maybe I've shared a couple of times before, which is that on my mother's side, there's a tradition that we’re descended from King David. In fact, my cousin went to the Diaspora Museum in Tel Aviv, which has a database of all the Jews and much of the genealogy, and he was able to trace us back to the 11th century, to a Rabbi who was a direct descendant from David on his father's side. I'm not going to overturn and seek to interpret in David's favor. I don't care who my ancestor was. I'm going to tell you the truth. David was a spiritual seed mixer. And we see that from 1 Samuel 5 and other passages. It says, “Now the Philistines came and spread out in the Valley of Refaim.” I love this story, ‘cause I live in the Valley of Refaim. That's a place in Jerusalem. To this day, it's called “Valley of Refaim,” “Emek Refaim,” the “Valley of Giants.” I've met Michael many a time in the coffee shops on Emek Refaim, on that street named after the valley in which it's located.

“The Philistines came and spread out in the Valley of Refaim. And David asked Yehovah, saying, ‘Shall I go up against the Philistines, will you give them into my hand?’ And Yehovah said, ‘You shall surely go up because I will give the Philistines into your hand.’” David's doing everything right. He's asking God, “Should I go out to war?” God is saying, “Go out.” He's obeying God. “David came to Ba'al Pratzim and David smote them there and he said, ‘Yehovah has burst forth.’” Say, “burst forth.”

Crowd: Burst forth.

Nehemia: “...upon my enemies before me as the water burst forth.” Now, what it's describing here is what we call in Israel a “flash flood.” You'll be standing on a perfectly cloudless day, the sun is shining, and all of a sudden, a wall of water will come rushing through the valley. And why is that? Because 10 miles away, it's raining somewhere. And actually, to this day, people are killed every year in Israel by these flash floods, because the water comes out of nowhere. And David's saying, “Yehovah has burst forth upon my enemies in my presence before me, as the water bursts forth. Therefore, he called the name of the place ‘Yehovah Pratzim.’” That's not what it says. It says, “Therefore, he called the name of the place Ba'al Pratzim.” Somebody say, “Uh-oh.”

Crowd: Uh-oh.

Nehemia: “Ba'al Pratzim” means, “Lord bursting forth.” Now, David wasn't honoring the Canaanite deity, he was referring to Yehovah, calling Him by the name of the Canaanite deity. That's an uh-oh. David was a spiritual seed mixer. David actually had a son named after Ba'al.

You know, I'm not going to go on here. I have another 30 slides, Keith, I can’t go on. I want to share something. Michael was introducing me, and he said something. And he only told you half the story. When he talked about “The Hebrew Yeshua Versus the Greek Jesus,” he came to me with this problem, and I researched it. What he didn't tell you, and what I've never said publicly, is that when I was researching this topic that eventually became the book, “The Hebrew Yeshua Versus the Greek Jesus,” I thought, “This is amazing. This is one of the most important discoveries,” I thought, “in a long time. And there are people whose lives are based on this one letter in one verse in the Greek, and that's not what it even says in the Hebrew version.”

And I went to Michael, and I said, “Michael, here's this information. Study it, and read it, and we'll talk.” And he studied it, and he read it, and we sat down. I said, “Michael, you need to share this with the world. You need to publish this, but please, whatever you do, don't mention my name. Because if people find out that I'm talking about Yeshua, and I'm saying that he actually taught the Torah, they're going to tar and feather me. I'm going to be persecuted, I'm going to lose friends.” And these things have happened. Some of my closest friends won't talk to me today because they said, “You're teaching about Yeshua, and you're not trying to convince people to give up belief in Him? I don't understand, have you converted to Christianity? What are you doing?”

And I actually asked Michael if he would share it with the world, and he said, “Nehemia, if I say this, people won't receive it. I can't go and write something about the Pharisees. I don't know anything about the Pharisees from my firsthand experience. And I can't write about how I read in some Hebrew manuscript somewhere. They know I can't read Hebrew manuscripts, no one's gonna buy it.” And so, I prayed about this and very reluctantly said, “Okay, I'm going to share this.” And there have been consequences.

And I’ve mentioned, we did a little promo, and we did this interview, and we talked about what happened in Smithfield. And I want to share with you what happened there, because it for me was a life-changing experience, it really was. And what happened in Smithfield... I gotta backup and tell you something that happened that I've never publicly shared. I've told three people in my life, actually five. I told two people yesterday, I told Keith last week, and before that, I told two people in 30 years. And this is something that happened to me many, many years ago. I was probably 8 years old, or 9 years old... now you know I'm 38.

We have this tradition in Judaism, over the Passover Seder. We sit down, the evening of the beginning of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and we read over the story of the Exodus, and we drink the four cups of wine, etc. And at a certain point, we pour a cup of wine for the Prophet Elijah. And there's a tradition that you then go up and you open the door, and you let Elijah in. And nobody takes this seriously. It's a silly little tradition that, you know, “We let in Elijah, you know, ha, ha, ha.” And why Elijah? Because if you read in the last verses of Malachi, Elijah will return one day. Can I get an Amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Nehemia: And the Jewish understanding is when he was taken up in the chariot of fire, that Elijah is still alive, he never died. And Keith told me when I told him last week, that that's actually what many Christians believe as well. Is that true, that Elijah is still alive?

Crowd: Yes.

Nehemia: Okay, I didn't know that. And there I am, I'm eight or nine years old, and my father says, “Okay, Nehemia, it's your turn this year. Go and open up the door and let Elijah in.” And we're laughing about it and joking. It's a silly little thing, silly little tradition, no one takes seriously. And I opened the door. He's standing in front of me. I saw Elijah. And, you know, some of you are saying, “Yeah right, Nehemia saw Elijah.” And believe whatever you want, but I know that standing in front of me was a man. I'm not gonna describe it for you, but it wasn't a modern human being. Standing in front of me was Elijah. And what do you think I did?

What's that? Well, I mentioned yesterday, I'm a Litvak. That's Jews who came from Lithuania, the intellectual elite of the Jewish world, rightfully so. And in my teaching, in my tradition, you didn't deal with angels and spirits. That was unheard of. That was for the superstitious people, it's not even real. We have the truth, because we've got the book learning. We've got the information, say, “Information.”

Crowd: Information.

Nehemia: …and we don't deal with that inspiration, say, “Inspiration.”

Crowd: Inspiration.

Nehemia: And we believe that, as it says in the Book of Joel, the spirit of prophecy will be poured out on your young men, and your young women, and your old people, and your young people, on everyone. But that'll only happen when the Messiah comes, and sits, and reigns as the King over Israel as a flesh and blood King; that's the Litvak belief.

And so, I see Elijah, I'm standing before him, and I'm like, “What's going on here?” I close the door, walk back to the table, never said a word. To this day, unless my mother’s watching right now, my parents didn't know about it. Never heard it, didn't know anything about it. Still don't know about it. Because we didn't deal with those spiritual experiences. We won't do that.

And, you know, I've been interacting with people of all kinds of different walks, and faiths, and cultures. Last week, I spoke in a place where they believe that the Book of Mormon is Scripture. I mean, if you would have told me 20 years ago, “Nehemia, you're going to be going around speaking to Christians, and Messianics, and Mormons...” and they don't like to be called “Mormons,” you know, various groups like that, I would have said, “That's ridiculous. I don't want to have anything to do with those people. I don't want to have any connection to them.” But what I’ve found is God is bigger than the boxes that we've created for Him. Now, I'm gonna say something controversial. My people, the Litvaks, weren't the only ones who created a box for God. Your people have also created boxes for God, tried to stuff Him in there and said, “Nehemia can't have a spiritual experience, because he ain't saved.” Is this not what many of your people have been saying?

Crowd: Yes.

Nehemia: I know it is. And you're entitled to be wrong. And many of my people have been contacting me and saying, “That guy, Keith, he's a Christian. He can't have a true spiritual experience, ‘cause he's not a Jew. If he wants to have the truth, and the true inspiration, then he needs to become a Jew.”

And can I share the story about my father? So, Keith comes to Israel back in February. We actually were getting together for two weeks of study and preparation to do a presentation on Christian television over in West Texas, which was going to be called something to the effect of, “A Jew and a Christian come together on common ground in an ancient Hebrew prayer.” That eventually was cancelled, that program, because they said, “The only way we could have Keith on television again, is if Nehemia comes and debates his lack of belief in Yeshua as the Messiah.” Now, I'll tell you what I told them and what I've told everyone, which is that I believe the Messiah will come, and you say come back, but I believe the Messiah will come and sit as a flesh and blood King over Israel. He'll be a descendant of David, and He won't just be a regular man, like this man or that man. He will have the spirit of Yehovah resting upon him, according to Isaiah 11.

Crowd: Amen.

Nehemia: He will judge not with his eyes and hear not with his ears. He will have that spirit of Yehovah and be a Prophet not like the other Prophets. And I believe this will happen. And I'll tell you something that 10 years ago, if you would have said, “Well, do you believe that's Jesus?” I would have said, “I don't know what His name will be, but I know it can't be Jesus.” And I'm not dealing with the Jesus or Yeshua, I would have said, “I know it can't be Yeshua.” And I could have given you a long list of reasons. And the biggest reason is that Yeshua did away with the Torah. This is what every Christian I've ever met has told me. That's what I would have told you 10, or 15, or 20 years ago.

Now I'll tell you that I don't know what His name is gonna be. I really don't know what His name will be. And whoever it is, we're all going to accept Him as the Messiah. You're going to accept Him, and I'm gonna accept Him, because it will be a fact that He will be sitting on the throne of David, ruling the world.

Well, so Keith was over there in Israel, and my father came to visit, my father, the Orthodox Rabbi. And had you ever met my father before?

Keith: Only on the phone.

Nehemia: Only on the phone. Keith had spoken to my father several times on the phone, but he'd never actually met my father. And we come over there on late Thursday afternoon. And the plan is that Keith has been invited for Shabbat afternoon lunch. And he says to my father, “Rabbi Gordon, I have something really special I want to share with you on Shabbat.” And I lean over, and I say to my father, “It's good news.” And my father says, “Oh, no.” He has this deep voice, “Oh no. If it's about Jesus, I don't want to hear it.” And I said, “No, it's not about Jesus, I'm just kidding.”

So, Shabbat afternoon comes along, and he comes for the meal. This is the event of the week in the Jewish family, Friday night dinner and Shabbat afternoon dinner. And we're eating at the meal and then we come to the end and they do what's called the Birkat HaMazon, that's the grace after meal. This is a whole ritual, this blessing. And this particular blessing, anyone can say it, even if you're one person. But in order to make a special blessing in this grace after meal, you need have three Jewish males. And at this point, Keith says, “Okay, now I'm ready to share.” And he gets a Tanakh, and he opens it up and he starts reading to my father from Isaiah 56, and he's preaching, and he’s talking. He says, “Rabbi Gordon, it talks here about the son of the Gentile who joins himself to the God of Israel, and loves His name, and keeps His Sabbath, and embraces His covenant.” He says, “Rabbi Gordon, can I be the third person in your blessing? Because according to Isaiah 56, I'm part of Israel.”

And my father looks at him and he says in his deep voice, “You don't count.” And he explains, “If you want to count, you have to appear before a panel of Rabbis and you have to convert to Judaism and undergo all the ceremony and ritual of that.” And I want to know where that says that in Isaiah 56.

You know, I think it was last week, we got an email from one of the top Karaites in the world. Actually, we got an email from the top Karaite in the world. And Keith said, “That can't be, because you, Nehemia, are the top Karaite in the world.” No. And I have a secret for you, I'm not. But we got an email from the top dog. And he says, “What on earth happened in Smithfield? What are you guys gonna do and reveal on Shavuot?” He was very nervous. And you have to understand, this is a man who I have the utmost respect for. I think he's one of the greatest scholars living.

And before I actually put out the book “The Hebrew Yeshua Versus the Greek Jesus,” I sent it to him, and I said, “Would you please give me your feedback?” Now, he didn't agree with everything and he wasn't happy about everything. But he read it and he said, “Okay, I see where you're coming from, I see what you're doing. Go forth and prosper.” And before we published “A Prayer to Our Father,” we also sent it to this man. He's a man who lives over in England. And he said, “Go forth and prosper.” He didn't agree with everything, it's not exactly his approach. He thinks it's better, if you're going to talk to Christians, to convince them why they shouldn't believe in Yeshua. That's his approach. He's not exactly comfortable with what I'm doing, but he said, “Okay, I see where you're coming from. And what you've written there, I may not agree with all of it, but you believe this is the truth.” He hears about what's going on now and he's really nervous. There's no more, Go forth and prosper. “What are you guys up to?”

And we call him up, and we speak on the phone and we explain to him what happened in Smithfield, and I think he was a little bit more calm. And he definitely didn't agree with everything we're doing and saying, but he understood where we're coming from. And we then spoke to another man, and Keith quoted him Isaiah 56. And he didn't have the deep voice, but he basically said to Keith - this is a Karaite man whom I have great respect for - but he then said to Keith, not in these exact words, but he basically said to him, “You don't count.” So, it's not just the Rabbis who are doing this. Both camps are saying, “If you don't go through that narrow gate, the conversion to Judaism, and undergo the training and undergo the circumcision...” And if you're already circumcised, you get re-circumcised, did you know that?

You know, my mother tells the story that when the mohel cut me, I got him back by pissing in his face. True story. A true story. But what basically they're saying, on the Jewish side, and this is in all the camps, is if you want to count, if you want to be part of God's people, if you want to be part of His covenant, the one and only covenant, then you must become a Jew. You must convert to Judaism. And that's not what my Bible says, though. My Tanakh doesn't say that. My Tanakh talks about those who join themselves to Yehovah that they shall not say, “Yehovah is surely separating me from His people.” That's what it says in my Bible. So, Keith, I believe you do count.

Now, on the Christian side, they're saying the same thing. They're saying, “Nehemia, you don't count. Nehemia, you can't have a true spiritual experience, because you didn't say the sinner's prayer. Nehemia, you haven't accepted the four spiritual laws and therefore, you don't count.” And you know what? I'm gonna let those people say what they're saying, and then the other side say what they want to say. You know, say whatever you want, guys. I know that I saw Elijah.

And I'll tell you what happened in Smithfield. In Smithfield, we preached about a bunch of things, but one of the things that we both taught on was the name of our Heavenly Father, the name that Yeshua sanctified. The name that the Tanakh says, “This is My name forever, the name ‘Yehovah.’”

I was standing there in a church. This is a Sunday-keeping church. There's a big cross in the background. I was teaching there in the morning. We then go to lunch with the Pastor, and he orders the bacon, lettuce, and tomato burger. And he's sitting next to me, and I'm like, “What on earth am I doing in this place? Does he know I'm Jewish?” And then he tells Keith while I'm sleeping, and I wake up later and find this, that we are in a place that used to have a sign at the front, which said, “Welcome to Smithfield, the home of the KKK.” And next to the church we were preaching, there was the home of the Grand Dragon of the KKK.

It used to be, not anymore, and the town has changed. But I'm thinking, “If God is going to be anywhere, He's not going to be here at this church with the big cross, and the bacon-eating Pastor, and the KKK in Smithfield, North Carolina. God is not here. If He's anywhere in the world, He is not going to be here. That's the one thing I can guarantee you.” And I'm sitting there, and I'm giving my little presentation with my little slides, and I'm minding my own business. And guess what I encounter? I encounter the Father of creation. I'm standing there, and there's this outpouring of people who are dedicating themselves and committing themselves to Yehovah.

And I'm thinking, “Wait a minute, no, no, no. These are Christians. This is not happening. They believe in Jesus. They pray to Jesus and they have all the Jesus things going on. Just this morning they were singing about Jesus, and now all of a sudden, they're standing up, and they're committing themselves to Yehovah, to my God, the Father of the Old Testament and the Father of the New Testament. But this isn't supposed to happen. God is not supposed to be in this place.” But God was in that place.

You know, in the Christian world, they talk about the “Azusa Street Revival” and the “Toronto revival.” And I walked away from that place and I said, “This is the Smithfield revival. This act of committing yourself to Yehovah, to the God that we share in common. To your Father, to my Father, the Father of creation, the one who Yeshua, your Messiah, the one who you believe to be the Messiah, the One that He said to sanctify His name. I believe this will go forth across the world, and people I never met and will never meet, will dedicate themselves and commit themselves to Yehovah, the God of creation.”

Let me read you something. On the way back, as we were driving, we had a three-million-hour drive back to Charlotte from Smithfield. And on the way back, I'm saying to Keith, I said, “What just happened here?” I called it the “Smithfield revival,” not Keith. And I'll tell you why I called it the Smithfield revival. The verse that was going through my head that I haven't even shared with Keith, this is a verse in the Psalms. And I open up to Psalm chapter 85. It's a really interesting Psalm, ‘cause it starts off and it says... In Hebrew it says in verse 2, and I would imagine in English it's verse 1, ‘cause they don't include the titles in the English versions as part of the verses. Verse 2 in the Hebrew, probably verse 1 in the English. It says, “Ratzita Yehovah artzekha. Shavta shevit Ya'akov.” “Yehovah, You have accepted Your land, You have comforted your land. You have returned the remnant, the captivity of Jacob.” They're talking about a time when the captives had returned from Babylon and they're now back in the land, and everything's supposed to be hunky dory, right? It's not.

He continues to pray. He says, “You've forgiven us,” etc. etc. And then verse 6, he says, and this is a translation from Hebrew, “Will Your wrath against us be forever?” God’s still angry at us. “Will your anger continue for generation to generation?” And verse 7, and probably 6 in the English, he says, “Surely, You will once again revive us.” Say, “Revive us.”

Crowd: Revive us.

Nehemia: “Your people will rejoice in You.” And the reason I was thinking about this verse is because it doesn't say in the Hebrew, “You will surely once again revive us.” It says, “Revive us.” What it says is, “Halo ata tashuv,” say, “Tashuv.”

Crowd: Tashuv.

Nehemia: “...tekhayenu” which literally translates, “Surely, You will return and You will revive us.” Are the Jews also waiting for a return? We are. Ezekiel had the vision where he sees the cherubim, and the Rabbis said, “This is such a difficult passage. We're going to talk about everything in the Bible, except the vision of the cherubim of Ezekiel. We can't talk about that.” It's actually a Rabbinical prohibition to talk about that, and also, one other thing. We can't study that in depth.

And what was the vision of the cherubim? He sees it in the Temple, and he sees it then moving out of Jerusalem and leaving. That was the Shekhina, the Shekina glory. That was Yehovah's presence, the thing that we feel. That something, that intangible thing that we can't even describe, that we know that's God. That was leaving Jerusalem when the Temple was destroyed. That was Ezekiel's vision, and here in the Psalms, he says, “Surely, You will return and You will revive us.” And I believe that Yehovah is returning and reviving His people.

And what really happened to me in Smithfield, I'm gonna let you in on a secret. When I saw that outpouring of people dedicated to themselves to Yehovah, I've seen that before. What really happened in Smithfield wasn't so much to the people. It was something that happened with me. And what happened with me is I said, “Yehovah, I see that You're returning and You're reviving Jew, and You're reviving Christian, and Gentile. You're reviving the people who have gone in through this door, and the people who say, ‘No, you can only get in through this door.’ And they can't agree with the shape of the door, or the place of the door, or what the door is. And maybe it's the same door, I don't know. But You're reviving the people.”

David had the Shekhina with him, but he sinned. And so, we're not perfect. Maybe I'm a sinner, because I don't believe what you believe. I don't know. I don't think I am. And many of you may think I am, because I don't confess what you confess. But I'm trying like David tried. And all I think that Yehovah wants from us is for us to do our best, and to try and to live by His covenant.

And I’m gonna to say to my Jewish brothers... You guys, close your ears. You don't need to hear this. What I'm gonna say to my Jewish brothers is these Christians, and these Messianics who are trying, God is working with them. God is reviving them. God has returned, Yehovah, the God of creation, and He's doing that with my people. What I decided in Smithfield, I said, “Yehovah, You've returned, and I see what you're doing. Next time, I'm not going to shut the door.” I've got nothing else to say.

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The Name of God in Action with Keith Johnson (Open Door Series – Part 4)

Part 4 of the Open Door Series features Keith Johnson speaking on the Name of God in Action. God is breaking down barriers of tradition and calling Jew and Gentile to search the Scriptures for truth that will allow them to fellowship with His Holy Name. Johnson explains how the Leningrad Codex and Aleppo Codex, the oldest and most complete Hebrew manuscripts of the Bible, reveal the pronunciation and the power of the name that slew Goliath, the name that is a strong tower, the name that is a song on the shofar—the name of our heavenly Father Yehovah.

Transcript

The Name of God in Action with Keith Johnson (Open Door Series - Part 4)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Keith: For that which we just heard, and that which we're about to hear, we will have to leave our place of comfort. The Creator of the universe is doing something right now around the world, and people who have a certain level of comfort are being removed from their place of comfort. I know that because it's happened to me, it's happened to Nehemia and the list goes on, and on, and on.

Now that we've made this switch and stretched our legs, I want you to consider something right now, and that is that the Creator of the universe now wants to do something for you. He wants to take away what you're willing to give Him, and He wants to give you what you're willing to receive. He wants to take away what you're willing to give Him, and he wants to give you what you're willing to receive. So, would you do an act of receptivity? Would you just take your palms, like this? Let's stop again, put your palms down. I guess I should be fair to you about what I'm going to ask you to do. It's not fair to have you put your palms like this and then say a prayer, because it just might be that the prayer might be answered and you might say, “Wait, I didn't know the end result.” So, let me explain to you what I'm going to pray.

I only simply want you to put your palms like this if you're willing to let the Creator of the universe take away what He wants to take away, and give you what He wants to give you. Now, I need to warn you. Sometimes He answers the prayer. Let me say it again. If you take your palms, and you say, “Father, take away what You want to take away and give me what You want to give me,” there are times where He'll answer that prayer. And, you know, sometimes He'll do it just like that. I just have to stop for a moment, because in this room there are people that are holding on to some things that they must, say, “Must.”

Crowd: Must.

Keith: ...let Him take. There are other people that are here that have closed themselves to receive what He wants to give them. And so, they must…say, “Must.”

Crowd: Must.

Keith: ...open their lives for Him. So, let's try this, only if you're willing. Take your palms and let's pray. Father, for this opportunity we thank You. We do not take this lightly to be in this city at this time. We do not believe that this is simply just an act of obedience on our part. We believe that You have called us to this place. It is the day before the meeting. Your word says that there was a call for sanctification. Right now, Creator of the universe, take away what You want to take, and give us what You want to give us. In the end we'll give You all the praise, all the glory, and all the honor. You are worthy to be praised. And all the people said together, “Amen.” You may have a seat.

Oh, oh, now look at y'all. Everybody, stop. Everybody, stop. Everybody, stop. Don't move. No, don't move, now. Don't try to get back. Stop where you are. Look around at what everybody's trying to do. What everybody's trying to do is, “Okay, that was good, let me get back to my place of comfort.” Oh, you don't understand. You don’t understand. You don't get to leave that place that was not comfortable. Now, turn around, teshuva. Repent and get back to the spot you were just sitting at. Don't you try. Don’t you try. Don’t you try. Go back to the uncomfortable spot. Some of you are like, “I don't like that, I don't know that person.” It's okay. Now look up here. Look up here. Everyone, just go like this. Palms again. Give me, say, “Give me.”

Crowd: Give me.

Keith: What You want to give me.

Crowd: What You want to give me.

Keith: And take away.

Crowd: And take away.

Keith: What You want to take away.

Crowd: What You want to take away.

Keith: Including my discomfort.

Crowd: Including my discomfort.

Keith: Now have a seat. You all, I'm so excited to be able to share after Nehemia spoke, because many of you may not realize the significance of what just happened. You had a Jewish man who happens to be a Hebrew scholar, who is a part of the Dead Sea Scrolls project. He's got his undergraduate from the Hebrew University. He's got his graduate degree in biblical studies from the Hebrew University. And he just stood in front of you and gave you information that could change your life. However, there are so many of us who have preconceived ideas, that regardless of what we hear, we ain't moving. Can I get an Amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: It kind of reminds me of... You see for me, I like what Michael says, “If you have a dog in the fight...” I never had a dog in the fight. I was minding my own business at a good old fashioned 1,200-member, large church. I was the Chaplain for the Minnesota Vikings, traveling around the world, doing evangelists. I had a great job, great gig, great family, everything’s fine. The Father meddles with me, but you see, I didn't have the baggage that so many people have, so that when I began to learn information, it wasn't about me recreating something, it was about it being downloaded into my life. And once I learned it, there was no choice, I had to embrace it.

So many of us that are sitting here today have been conditioned in our minds in certain ways and in certain areas, so that when new information comes, there's just something in us… If we don't move from our place of comfort, we will be stuck. There will be no stuck-ness this weekend. Jeremiah 16:21 says this, “Therefore behold, I am going to make them know.” That's amazing. The Father said this, “I'm going to make ‘em know.” This time, say, “This time.”

Crowd: This time.

Keith: “I am going to make them know My power and My might.” And then, after that, “They shall know that My name is…” and, of course, we have those four consonants. And I understand the battle over this issue, and I will tell you that I am presently, even as I stand before you here in the state of Texas, in the midst of controversy over the fact that I chose to open the scrolls to the public. When I opened the scrolls to the public regarding these four letters, they kicked me off TV.

Crowd member: Hallelujah.

Keith: Hallelujah? He said, “Hallelujah.” Listen, you all, I did a really radical thing. I thought - and this was really an assumption on my part – I thought truth was more important than tradition. No, I'm telling you. I thought that especially this group of people... And I will tell you right now, some people are a little nervous about me talking about this. The reason I want to challenge you all, in the Messianic community especially, is I think there's an opportunity for the Messianic community to lead the charge in truth if we're willing to break tradition… if.

So, we just had an opportunity to have a legitimate Hebrew scholar stand in front of you and speak the name. Now, I'm gonna get to this, because it's very important. Jeremiah says here, “They shall know that my name is...” and I will leave it right now for those four letters. We all agree on the four letters, Amen? Nobody disagrees with that.

I want to take you back to the Old City of Jerusalem. After I was with Michael for a few days and I met my friend Zakki and we've told you the story about the Torah scroll, the next day, Nehemia and I are supposed to be going to a tour of the Old City of Jerusalem. And what he was planning for us to do was to go under the Old City of Jerusalem into the tunnels. How many of you all have been to the tunnels in the Old City of Jerusalem? It's a very, very powerful experience.

And as we were preparing to go, I asked him the question that I had asked many Jewish people before, “Can you tell me something about the name of God?” And every time I asked this question, I heard usually three responses. “His name is too holy to pronounce. It's too profound for you to understand. It's too powerful for you to know; therefore, you are prohibited from learning it.”

And this caused a great struggle in me, because the year before, though I had spent all of these years involved in regular, good old fashioned evangelical ministry, the Creator of the universe was calling me, bringing me to the Hebrew scriptures, beginning to learn things that I had not learned before. And I kept finding over and over again, in my newly acquainted Hebrew Bible, these four letters, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, 6,828 times in my Hebrew Bible, the Bible that Yeshua would have read. He would have also seen these four letters over, and over, and over. And so, I would ask my Jewish brothers and sisters about this, and I'm telling you, to a person, they said, “No.”

I'm sitting at the Old City of Jerusalem. I ask Nehemia Gordon, who loves to answer questions, “Nehemia, can you tell me about the four-letter name?” “Absolutely, do you have a piece of paper and pencil?” Sounds familiar? What did the Pastor ask Nehemia, “Do you know about the four letters?” And Nehemia says, “Do you have a piece of paper and pencil?” Let me tell you what I love about this. Nehemia has yet to give me simply his opinion regarding this matter. What he has challenged me to do is search the scriptures for myself. And then the blessing was, he gave me the access to the tools wherein I could dig for myself.

But I'm gonna tell you why I did it. I did it for people like you. Because, you see, I am of the opinion that some people would say, giving information to those that are not in control takes away your influence of power. I would say that your "influence of power" is not supposed to be that way, anyway. I believe what the people need is an opportunity to understand it for themselves.

So, as I'm in the Old City of Jerusalem, I asked Nehemia the question. He said, “Do you have a piece of paper and pencil?” I write the Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey. He says, “Well, there are some manuscripts, two specifically, that actually have places… not in every place in the manuscript, places in the manuscript, where the name is written ‘Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey’ and the scribe, and we do not know why, places in not two vowels, but three.” Why is this important? What does this have to do with me?

Well, if you're reading in the Hebrew manuscripts and you come across the name “Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey” with two vowels, that is an impossibility for you to be able to speak. That was them operating by the ban, but for some reason, say, “Some reason.”

Crowd: Some reason.

Keith: ...there were some scribes, say, “Some scribes.”

Crowd: Some scribes.

Keith: ...who got caught up as they're going like this in the Hebrew Bible, and for some reason, say, “Some reason.”

Crowd: Some reason.

Keith: There were some scribes, say, “Some scribes.”

Crowd: Some Scribes.

Keith: ...who decided to add a third vowel into the four-letter name. Why did they do it? Maybe it was subconscious, maybe it was the Holy Spirit, somebody say, “Maestro.”

Crowd: Maestro.

Keith: But they put the four consonants and three vowels so that if you came across it, you'd have to be able to speak it.

Now, I'm sitting with Nehemia, he tells me this story. I said, “Okay, Nehemia.” And he goes on to explain more. Now, I'm living with Michael. Michael is giving me time, freedom to run, do whatever I want to do. I sit there with Nehemia, and he says, “According to the oldest, most complete vocalized Hebrew manuscripts, the name would be...” and he pronounces the name. As soon as he does this, there's a man standing next to us with a tallit and tzitzit, and he does a radical thing that cannot get out of my mind or my heart for the last 10 years.

Now, when I travel, I travel with this gun case. And I've had some situations happen when I go into the airport, where the TSA get a little nervous with a bald-headed black guy with a gun case, and they've asked me questions over and over again. It will go through the deal, and they'll say, “Supervisor.” And the supervisor will come, and as it goes through, the supervisor will stop and ask me what it is. And I love to tell this one little story, because as Nehemia and I are traveling along, this thing goes through the TSA and the lady says, “Supervisor.”

The supervisor comes and all he does is he grabs my gun case, holds it out in front of me and says, “Well?” And I wasn't in the mood to play around with this man, I said, “It's the horn of God.” And the supervisor said, “You mean, like the one they blew when they were taking around the walls of Jericho? I know about that,” he said. “And I'm telling you right now,” he said, “We could have revival right here.” This is what the supervisor said. And you all, I've had so many stories where this has happened.

The reason I'm bringing this is because when Nehemia proclaims the name found in the Aleppo Codex and the Leningrad Codex, and proclaims the name, this man - and we don't know where he came from, who he was - but he blew this horn of God two times. What I will tell you all is, I have been arrested by this sound. I can't get enough of His name, and I cannot get enough of the sound of the shofar. So, before I get started, say, “Before.”

Crowd: Before.

Keith: I want to take you back to the Old City of Jerusalem. Would you do me a favor? Imagine this. You're me, the Methodist. You're at Michael's house, you don't even know what you're doing there. You're just following every single day according to Isaiah, whether you turn to the left or to the right, may you hear the voice behind you saying, “This is the way, walk ye in it.” Every single day, all I'm doing is walking by the Spirit. All I'm doing is waiting to hear, left or right. All I'm waiting for is, who should I meet? Who should I talk to? What should I say? Where should I go? Come on, somebody. All I'm doing is taking step, by step, by step.

And then I meet this nut who breaks the tradition of proclaiming the name according to the information found in the manuscripts. He proclaims the name. Bow your heads. This is not an altar call. This is simply an opportunity for you to focus for a moment, hearing my Jewish brother proclaim the name and listening to the sound of the two blasts of the shofar. Nehemia, I want you to stand up, if you would. And all I simply want you to do, nice and loud, that the world might be able to hear, according to all of your studies and according to all of the information, and according to the inspiration, dealing with the oldest Hebrew manuscripts back and forth. As we're sitting in that place, all I want you to do is proclaim it the way you proclaimed it on that day, and then I shall blow the shofar.

Nehemia: Yehovah.

Keith: [blows shofar] Hallelujah. Hallelujah. I know you all caught that last little four notes, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hay. Did y'all hear that? Did that move anybody else? Yud-Hay-Vav-Hay. Can I do that again? Would that be all right with you all? I'm gonna get to the message here. There's something about hearing the sound. I think they tell me, eventually, we're going to hear this sound again. From what I understand in the Book, it says that when they came to the mountain for Shavuot, there were loud blasts of the shofar. One more time. Can I play the four letters, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey?

Crowd: Yes.

Keith: If you're open, put your palms like this.

Keith: [blows shofar] Oh, my goodness. [blows shofar] When I hear this man tell me this information, it begins to cause a great call on my life. I came to Israel for three things which I did not know, to encounter God's time, God's Torah, and God's tetragrammaton, the four letters. Ten years later, I come to find out, when Michael and I are sitting in the office together, he says to me, “You know, Keith, for 10 years, you've been dealing with this.” He said, “For 40, I've been dealing with God's time, God's Torah, and God's name.”

I am so excited to be here today, because I think that what is happening is that we are being put into a situation where we can take our joint efforts to proclaim God's time, God's Torah, and God's tetragrammaton, His four letters, throughout the earth. In order to do that, we have to stay in the place of what I call “a little bit of discomfort.” The other thing we'll have to do is to dig, say, “Dig.”

Crowd: Dig.

Keith: Here's a picture under the Old City of Jerusalem. There are massive stones, you all, I think Nehemia told me 600 metric tons. Some of these stones are under the Old City of Jerusalem that are holding it up. And when I saw that information down there, and I saw the way that this place was built, I thought, “What would it be like if you gave people a biblical foundation for their faith?” So, that is why we came up with the Biblical Foundations Academy, which has published the information for you to have, and inspiration. I want you to say again these words that Nehemia has already taught us. Say, “Avinu.”

Crowd: Avinu.

Keith: Shebashamayim.

Crowd: Shebashamayim.

Keith: Our Father who is in Heaven. And then in the second part, “Yitkadesh,” say, “Yitkadesh.”

Crowd: Yitkadesh.

Keith: Shimkha.

Crowd: Shimkha.

Keith: Now, let me tell you something that I think is really, really interesting. Yeshua is standing in front of these people on the mountain. We've actually been to the mountain where we believe, according to the information that we have, was the actual mountain where he preached. There's an outcropping that's there with this beautiful… like an auditorium almost, where you would be able to speak. I can speak in the language I'm speaking now in the volume, and you can hear it far, far, far away.

He does this radical thing. Why didn't Yeshua say this. “Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be My name?” I feel you over there, okay. He went like this, “Oh, boy.” Why didn't Yeshua stand up and say, “Hallowed be My name?” He said, “Hallowed be Your name,” because he understood that His name is holy. What he was also calling the people to is what we call a “call to action” to sanctify the name of His Father. And yet, when you open up your English Bible, you don't even get to interact with this holy name. Depending on your tradition, or your denomination, or your particular group or fellowship, they've already told you, “No, you can't know this name.” Yet Yeshua stands up and makes this radical statement. He says, “May Your name be sanctified.”

When I see that, I'm thinking to myself, “Okay, He could have said anything.” Obviously, after introducing the fact that he's speaking to the Father, the first thing he says out of the mouth is the name, the name is to be sanctified. Your name be sanctified in both Hebrew and Greek. It is "a call to action" and not simply a poetic pronunciation, a call to action.

I want to show you guys a picture. This is Reggie White, and that's Nehemia, I’d say, when he had hair and probably, I don't know, quite a few more pounds on him. Michael’s in the background. I want to call Michael a name right now, it's kind of funny. I don't think he'd be offended by this. Michael does more things that you guys would... You don't even understand the things that he does, the places where he's actually had influence in people's lives and never takes credit for it. Can I say that again? There are things that Michael Rood has done, and is doing right now, that he'll never take credit for. But God has used him.

This picture that's up on the screen of Reggie White and Nehemia Gordon, again, is another result of Michael Rood saying, “Yes, Reggie, come and I will host you.” He's the one who introduces Reggie to Nehemia. Unfortunately, Reggie has passed away, but he was a man of passion, a great football player. He played for the Green Bay Packers, and won the Super Bowl. He loved the name of God. He loved God and he loved the word. He goes over to Jerusalem, and he says to Nehemia, “Hey, Nehemia. I would like to see the Aleppo Codex, this most important Hebrew manuscript, which is connected to every Jewish Bible that we know.” And Nehemia says, “Sure.” He goes over to the museum and shows him a picture of a wonderful little Aleppo Codex. And then, Nehemia tells him something that I'm sometimes so glad he did. Nehemia says, “Well, what you're seeing right now is not the real Codex. The first two pages are real, but everything behind it is simply a fake.”

Reggie says, “That ain't good enough for me. I want to see the original,” that's what Reggie said. Nehemia said, “Oh no, you don't understand. Nobody sees the original. The Prime Minister has never seen the original. The original is in a vault that nobody gets to go to.” And Reggie didn't care, so Nehemia says, “Okay, I'll call, just to show you that you can't do it.” Nehemia calls the museum and says, “Listen, I've got a man here named Reggie White, he plays for the Green Bay Packers. He wants to see the original Aleppo.” “Nobody's seen the original Aleppo Codex, the Prime Minister doesn't see the original Aleppo Codex. Nobody sees it. It's in a vault, nobody sees it.”

An hour later, Nehemia gets a phone call. “Is Mr. White still interested in seeing the Aleppo Codex?” One of the greatest contributors to the Museum is a Green Bay Packer fan. He says that if Reggie will sign a picture, he will take him into the vault. Now, most people don't know this. Most people don’t know this. Mr. Smarty over here, Nehemia, when I called and said, “Hey, listen Nehemia, Reggie White wants to experience the same thing I did. Michael's over there, we're over there.” And Nehemia is like, “Who is he?” “He's a football player.” He's like, “Football? What, he plays soccer?” Nehemia didn't know who he was. I say, “He's a Green Bay Packer.” “I don't know who he is. Okay, he can come,” Not realizing that God was going to use the influence of a football player to get Nehemia to see something that he had dreamt and wanted to see his entire life.

They go into the vault, and there is the Aleppo Codex. Now, you all, there's so much information I could tell you about this. I actually put some in the book, “His Hallowed Name Revealed Again.” And certainly, you can go on the Internet to understand the significance of the crown jewel, the crown manuscript, the Aleppo Codex. But here's one thing that happened. After Reggie comes out of the vault, he says, “I want a copy.” “Well, Mr. White, you need to understand something. We made about 500 copies of these several years ago in the ‘70s, but there are no more left.” An hour later the phone call comes. “We have found 100 unbound copies of the Aleppo Codex.” He says, “I'll take four.” Four. He gives one to Nehemia, gives one to Qadry Ismail, gives one to myself, and he takes one for himself.

When he comes home from Israel, he says, “Keith, I've got a gift for you.” And he walks in, you all, and I don't know if you've ever seen it. Go to the interview that Michael and I and Nehemia did. We actually brought the Aleppo Codex which the other television station says it will not show the public. I will say this, I had brought the same Aleppo Codex, the Leningrad Codex, into a Texas television station, put it on top of a table, was about to teach about the very name found in that manuscript. And the week before they show the public that particular episode, they canceled it. And let me tell you why they canceled it. Because they were afraid of the information. Can I say it again? Because they were afraid of the information, because if I give the information to you, and you take that information for yourself, all of a sudden, we've got conflict with the tradition.

How many of you all know, I'm tired of tiptoeing around the tulips of tradition? Now, here's where God works. Let me tell you where God works. They kicked me off the television station where I was going to be sharing the manuscript that my friend, Reggie White, brought from Jerusalem, so you could see the information for yourself. And when it happened, I said to myself, “Oh Father. You've got to be kidding me.” It was just time to give the information and they canceled it at this moment. My interpretation, can I give you my interpretation? My Father in Heaven said, “They're not worthy of this information.” Why? Because it's more important to them to deal with tradition than with truth. And what the Creator of the universe is doing in this hour is, He's breaking down the barriers of tradition. He's beginning to move in places where He does not normally move. He's starting to call people from the east, and the north, and the south, and the west, and He's calling Gentiles and Jews alike. And this is causing a stir deep down in the bowels of the religious police. The spiritual border patrol is not happy that we continue to cross borders, giving information and inspiration where they have not given us their authorization.

Somebody say, “We don't need your authorization. We've got the One that created the borders, and He's told us to break the borders.” You all, I'm telling you something. God is doing something right now that we should be able to take our ears and perk them up and say, “Father, is it possible that you're going to move me from my place of comfort?”

You all, the night that Nehemia told me about this information, I went back to the apartment. I stayed up all night looking through every single page of my Hebrew Bible, until I found a place where the four letters were there with the three vowels and an accent. Now, you gotta be saying, “Wait, what does that matter?” What it matters is, if I don't see that, I can't proclaim it according to those manuscripts. I spent all night in Michael's apartment, looking, looking, looking. And it didn't matter to me what time it was, and then I found it.

The first place in Genesis 3:14 in the Leningrad Manuscript, which is the oldest, most complete manuscript that every English Bible that's in this room is based on, the Leningrad Manuscript. Here's the good news, you all. In 1975, in 1985, in 1989, in 1990, we don't have access to the Leningrad Manuscript. In 1991 Maestro tells Gorbachev, “Open up the museum, that they might be able to proclaim My name.” In 1991, glasnost comes and the Leningrad Codex is all of a sudden photographed, so that I can go on Amazon today, get it, and bring it into my house. All of a sudden, my friend, Reggie White, who goes over to see Michael and Nehemia gets a copy of the Aleppo. Somebody say, “Two witnesses.”

Crowd: Two witnesses.

Keith: I'm looking at the information, y'all. And I'm thinking, “Okay, this is easy. Let's simply give this information to the people.” What I didn't know is, I didn't realize just how much of a fight it was to break people out of their tradition. But I'm still fighting, because I think His name is worthy for a little effort on our part. I want to show you something, you all, and just bear with me here. After I show you this, we're actually going to start the message. This is from the book of Ezekiel, say, “Ezekiel.”

Crowd: Ezekiel.

Keith: A page from the Aleppo Codex itself. And what we find is something that goes against the scholars' statement regarding what happens with the name regarding vowels. What the scholars will tell you, and many people who have never studied it for themselves, they will tell you that the name Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey is replaced with the vowels from “Adonay,” say, “Adonay.”

Crowd: Adonay.

Keith: Now, that is a great theory, it makes sense. However, what do you do when you've got Adonay right next to Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey? In the English Bible, what it says is, “Lord God,” so what they want you to do is they give you "Lord" for “Adonay” and they give you "God" for “Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey.” So, what we do is we go in and we search the manuscripts and come to find out a secret. There's not one place in the entire manuscript, where the exact vowels of Adonay are ever, say, “Ever.”

Crowd: Ever.

Keith: ...placed into the four consonants, “Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey." Now, you all, I am not up here just preaching. There's actually information that you can deal with in the book. But the reason I have to give it to you is I want to show you something, if you go back to that slide. Right here, you guys, is the word “Adonay,” say, “Adonay.”

Crowd: Adonay.

Keith: Here are the four letters, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey. Now, what you notice is this is a vowel, this is a vowel and then on the top there's a vowel and there's an accent. That little dot on the top is the kholam, say, “Kholam.”

Crowd: Kholam.

Keith: So, what this scribe does - and we don't know why - the scribe is writing along, writing along, and all of a sudden, the scribe decides to put all vowels in the consonants. Now, what's even more interesting is in the Leningrad Manuscript, which is the Bible I carried to Jerusalem and did not know what was in my possession... Sounds like some of you. Some of you do not realize what is in your possession. I'm carrying the Leningrad Codex with me to Jerusalem. Nehemia says, “Well, let me see your Bible. Oh, it's based on the Leningrad, the name is right here.” I come to find out, if I can just go back to my little vision. I have a dream, there's a scroll flying over my head. I go to Jerusalem and I find a Torah scroll. I bring it to the apartment. Nehemia opens it up to Leviticus chapter 23. And how many days is it between Pesach and Shavuot? Can somebody say “50?”

Crowd: 50.

Keith: Guess how many times the name has full consonants, full vowels and an accent in the oldest complete vocalized Hebrew manuscript in the world?

Crowd: 50.

Keith: Did y’all hear that? Fifty times where the scribe got caught up and said, “I just can't help myself. I must break the ban. I've got to go against the rabbinical ban. I've got to deal with the tradition. Kick it out,” and oops, there it is, boom, “Yehovah.” Fifty times in the Leningrad Manuscript. Let’s move on. You all, get your Bibles, let's move on.

Something really interesting happened on my last trip, when I met with Nehemia in Israel. We were dealing with a very interesting process with each other. And simply what it was, was this. We had been confronted with what I call the “spirit of Goliath,” say, “Goliath.”

Crowd: Goliath.

Keith: Goliath was from Gat, say, “Gat.”

Crowd: Gat.

Keith: ...which means he was a Gittite, say, “Gittite.”

Crowd: Gittite.

Keith: So, Goliath the Gittite had gone out before the people and he had taunted all of the armies of Israel. Nehemia and I were all of a sudden faced with the spirit of Goliath, and we had this radical idea. Let's go to the place where David battled Goliath. Now, in Israel, one of the most beautiful things about being there is you can actually go to Biblical spots, places where, when you're reading your Bible, you can physically go to those spots, and it's an amazing experience. This particular spot that I'm going to show you is called the “Fortress of Elah,” Fortress of Elah. It had only been discovered in, I think, 2009, so over the last couple of years not many people know about the Fortress of Elah.

And so, usually what people would do is they’d go to another spot not far from the Fortress of Elah, to go to the brook where they believe David grabbed the five smooth stones. When this was discovered, they had to move from their place of comfort to a new spot. Nehemia was able to find with his GPS and his connections, where this was. And so, Nehemia and I go up to the Fortress of Elah, and I wanna show you something about this. Right here, you all, is the city gate. This is the spot where the one named David would have walked out on his way to go face Goliath. Say, “Goliath.”

Crowd: Goliath.

Keith: Next picture, this is the Valley of Elah. On the other side you've got the Philistines. On this side you've got the Israelites, and they would go down into the valley of Elah, and they would have their battle. So, what Goliath would do is he would come down and the Israelites would be on the edge there, and Goliath would come down and he'd begin to taunt them, and push them, and taunt them. And it says that the Israelites would run from where they were and scurry back into the fortress of Elah.

Now, you all know the story in Samuel. David, the one who came, decided after he heard this information that he wanted to be the one to battle Goliath. Something interesting about this. I'm going to show you a picture. I found a picture of a young man, we thought, “Oh, I bet he's around the age of David, maybe, and maybe he looks a little bit like David.” But then I did something really, really radical. How many of you all think that according to what we understand, David was like, 10, 11, 12 years old? Come on, raise your hands, a young person, 13 years old? How many people 13, 14? Okay. 15, 16, 17? Okay, excellent. 18? How many say he's 18?

Let's try again. Who says he was 10? Raise your hand. 11, 12? Raise your hands. 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18? Okay, we're getting close. He was a young man. So, I'm reading the Bible, and I'm thinking to myself, “Let me check a little context.” I come to find out in the chapter before the 17th chapter of Samuel, that there's a part where Saul is looking for someone to do what? Come and play the harp. And then one of the servants says to Saul, “I know a man who is a mighty man of valor, a great warrior who plays well.” Saul brings him into his service, and we find out at the end of 16 that David did such a wonderful job, not only of playing, that Saul made David an armor bearer. Do you think a 10-year-old was an armor bearer? I don't think so. David had already fought. In fact, we find out in the scriptures that David says, “The reason I'm not afraid of Goliath is because I've already been trained with the lion and the bear.”

You see, some of us right now in our present battles, are being prepared for the real battle. David understood this, and so, David was being prepared for the battle. And then, something happens. David is about to go to fight Goliath, and what he does is, after they go through this big discussion back and forth, he says, “Listen. I cannot go in your armor, for I have not tested it.” That's what he said. “I have not tested, I have not tried, so I'm gonna have to go with my own armor.” He figures his armor, he goes down into the riverbed, and he grabs five smooth stones.

Now, what I love about studying Bible stories and adding historical information, geographical information, is that there's so much that can be learned. Nehemia and I are there, looking at where David actually was, where he fought Goliath. We go down and we see where the stones are, and then Nehemia does this radical thing. He says, “Let's ask the question, where did these stones come from?” We end up coming to find out that the stones came from this place. This place is actually called “Migdal Oz.” Say, “Migdal Oz.”

Crowd: Migdal Oz.

Keith: Now, if you're driving in Israel and you see Migdal Oz, you might think, “No big deal.” But if I show you the next verse, you'll understand the significance of David being prepared to fight Goliath with the smooth stones. The stones from Migdal Oz started up there very rough, and a great current of water would come and wash the stones down, and the stones would clash against each other. And as they're clashing against each other, they would become smooth. Say, “Smooth.”

Crowd: Smooth.

Keith: But when we come to find out about Migdal Oz, we go to the Bible and we realize something really interesting. Well, here's a picture I should show you. That's Nehemia. Nehemia is down in the valley and he's thinking to himself, “I should get some of these smooth stones for my friend Keith.” And so, look at the great servant that he is. He's down there and he's picking up the smooth stones, and he only charged me $2 per stone. Where did those stones come from? The name of Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey is a strong tower. Say, “Migdal Oz.”

Crowd: Migdal Oz.

Keith: The righteous run into it and are safe. Imagine David. I wish I could preach this for a minute. The stones come from Migdal Oz. They have clashed together. They've been made smooth, and David decides on his way to go fight Goliath, he's going to pick up stones from Migdal Oz. I wonder, if David might have known where the stones come from. I wonder if David might have known, “Hey, listen. I understand, Saul, you want me to wear your armor. But I would rather just take myself a little bit of Migdal Oz to battle Goliath.”

David is on his way, no armor, but he's got stones from Migdal Oz. And what does he do, you all? He goes out, and Goliath begins to do what he loves to do, and that he's even doing right now. And I took my jacket that has my little pointer, so you're gonna have to get that. What does Goliath love to do? Goliath loves to taunt. And there are Goliaths in your life right now that are taunting you. They are pushing, and they are spitting, and they are doing this, and they are doing that. And what is happening is people are beginning to, what I call, “scurry back up,” scurry back up into their place of safety.

When are we going to believe that what we've got is greater than Goliath? When are you gonna believe that who you know is greater than Goliath? When are we going to find more Davids that are willing to stand up, go out and face the giants of our life?

Let me tell you why he had the confidence. His confidence was not in himself. He had had an encounter with the Creator of the universe. He had been anointed already as king. He had whooped some bears and he had whooped some lions. And I want to stop and say something. Some of you have been in what I call some of the “fights of your life.” Some of you have been in battles where you're just thinking, “Man, are you kidding me? I just got out of one and you got me in another?” Some of you are sitting here and saying, “Father, when are You going to finally be saying, ‘I'm preparing you? I'm preparing you for the real fight.’” Because I'm gonna tell you something, people. There's a real fight that's coming, and God needs a remnant of people that when it is time for us, can I say this? When it is time for us to stand up and be the people of God, we're willing to stand in the name of the One who can whoop Goliath. It's coming, you all. The fight is coming, and what I'm afraid of is that there aren't enough people that aren't afraid. I've learned something. If I trust in Him, even though sometimes I've got a little fear, I will be all right.

So, what happens? Goliath does something. Goliath comes to David, and I want you to see the screen here. Goliath comes to David and he does this. He curses David, and if you open up the English Bible what it will say in 1 Samuel 17:43, “Goliath cursed David by his Gods,” in English. “Goliath cursed David by his Gods.” Keep it up there for me, if you would. If I open the Hebrew Bible, I find this. “Goliath cursed David by his God.” So, what Goliath really did is he cursed David's God.

Did you hear what I said? Goliath cursed David's God. And at that point, I'm imagining the Creator of the universe up in heaven. And before that, maybe he's just letting David do his thing. You know, whoop the bear, whoop the lion, but then all of a sudden, the Creator of the universe hears Goliath curse God. And then he kind of said, “Wait a minute, hold on now. This is a story that I can have proclaimed even in Dallas, Texas, if it's told right. That when I heard Goliath curse me, I whooped Goliath.” And how did he whoop Goliath? You all know what it says. Here's what it says.

David says, “You come to me with javelin, with spear, and with sword, but I come to you in the name that cannot be proclaimed.” Oh, I come to you in the name that the Rabbis said I can't say. Oh, I come to you in the title that they put in the English Bible. Somebody say, “David didn't say that.”

Crowd: David didn't say that.

Keith: David didn't say, “I come in the name Hashem.” David didn't say, “I come in the name of Adonay.” David didn't say, “I come in the name of the Lord.”

Crowd: No.

Keith: David read the book that Yeshua read. Can I open up the book? I'm gonna get my shofar here in a minute. I can't see nothing. I'm telling you guys right now, I've gotta put on my readers, if that's alright. Just take a break, you all, if you would. Just take a break with me, if you would. Here's what David says.

He says, let’s see here. “You come to me.” I’m reading the book here. It says, “And David said unto the Philistine, ‘You come to me with sword, and spear and javelin.’” Then he says in Hebrew, “Ve'anokhi ba elekha beshem Yehovah tzevaot elohey ma’arkhot Yisrael.“I come to you...” hold on, somebody. He says, “Ve'anokhi ba elekha beshem Yehovah tzevaot.” Can't you hear? Goliath is like, “Oh, my goodness, I done woke up the name. I thought I could just curse Him the way I wanted to curse Him, and now He's brought the name into the battle.” David called upon the name, Yehovah, and from then it was over. The Philistine only had one choice. He was going to take it in the forehead and fall face down on the floor, because the Migdal Oz knocked him out.

Oh, my goodness. I understand something. I'm gonna tell you what I understand. I understand that some of you here have been in churches where you heard the preacher jump and shout. And you heard the singing, and you heard the yelling, and you heard all that. But can I tell you something? This preacher ain't making this up. This preacher has found this information. It has inspired me to a place. Oh, I'm still the nut. I could still cut a rug. But now, what I'm doing is I'm opening up the book that Yeshua read, and I can't help but preach it to you. Do you understand what I'm saying?

I’m gonna end this way. What is the Methodist Pastor doing in Dallas for Shavuot? What is he doing hanging out with Michael Rood? What is he doing hanging out with Nehemia Gordon? What is he doing hanging out with Arthur Bailey? What is he hanging out with Dr. Karen Taylor? I'm only doing one thing, following my call.

The foreigners who joined themself, Isaiah 56, to Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, to minister to Him, can I say something to you? I want to tell you something that might be offensive. I'm not preaching to you. I'm ministering to Him. You gotta hear me now, you gotta hear me. You all, I appreciate your faces. Some of you are looking at me like, “Where did they find him? Isn't he the Methodist Preacher? My goodness.” And I can see some of you that are struggling, saying, “No, I won't. No, I won't. No, I won’t.” Hey, do me a favor. Don't look at me. Hear what I'm saying from that book. I want to minister to Him.

And if I minister and serve Him, and He says, “And to love the name Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, to be His servants, everyone who keeps from profaning the Sabbath and holds fast to My covenant.” What is He saying? Time, Torah, and His name. Time, Torah, and His name. Until I die, I'm glad it's on camera, time, Torah, and His name. That's all I want to talk about. Time, Torah, and His name. And why do I want to talk about time, Torah and His name? Because when the foreigners came to Israel to take them out, there were three things they told the Israelites, you can no longer do. No more time, no more Torah, and no more God's name.

I'm willing to fight the Goliaths of the life, to tell them I'm willing to stand against Goliath and say, “You can curse me by my God? No way.” I will not come to you in my own strength. I will not come to you with my seminary degree. I will not come to you with my Methodist background. Hey, I hope they're listening to me. I will not come to you with what I used to do. I want to come to you in the name of the One that is amazing. He's awesome. He's magnificent. He's available. He's able, He's willing, and He's moving right now.

So, I'm gonna end by turning it over to my 10-year friend, Michael Rood. This guy has done something radical. He got me back on TV. Thank you, Michael Rood. He is letting me share this information with the world. Now, I'm gonna tell you about it because I have to. When this book was written, it was written with the help of 500 people from around the world, 226 pages, notebook after notes after notes, over 600-plus scriptures in the back. And what I love more than anything else, in the back of this book is a CD where you can take 80, say, “80.”

Crowd: 80.

Keith: ...different names and descriptions from the Bible that Yeshua read and proclaim them in the Hebrew tongue. People are praying in His name. People are walking in His name. People are believing in His name. People are bringing it into their devotional life and into their churches. And people are starting to say, “You mean to say the name is available?” You all, Michael has done what the other TV station wouldn't do. Michael said, “Hey, they kicked it out of there? I'll take it here.” Now, Michael Rood and Abby, they've got the book. Can I get an Amen on that?

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: Now, this is the last thing I'm going to say before I turn it over to my friend, Arthur, and to Michael. Well, it's almost the last thing. Because I'm kind of mad from two nights ago. Who was here two nights ago? We had met ahead of time and Michael said, “We're gonna split this half and half. Nehemia is gonna get half, and you're gonna get half,” and I got five minutes. So now, Michael, I need the time that you were going to give me that Nehemia stole. Can I get an Amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: No, no Michael, I'm right on time. Now, here's what I want to tell you guys that's even more radical. Even the “Rood Awakening” can't handle what I'm telling you right now. Even “Rood Awakening” could not handle this right here. What I have in my hand is that which was banned from TV. I have it in my hand. And so, it's not at the bookstore, unless Abby gets a change of heart. But right now, it is available. Not here, after Shabbat, if you want, go to hishallowedname.com and you can get that which is banned from television, that hopefully will be put back on television when I find somebody that's got enough guts, like Michael. Amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: Now, to close…Wait a minute, hold on. What did you say, Abby?

Abby: [inaudible 55:00]

Keith: Did you ever see a preacher run? That's good business on your sense. Now, don't go to hishallowedname.com. Michael Rood will have this, which is now available in Charlotte. It will be there, you all. If you get both things, I bet you they'll even give you...Somebody say, “A discount.”

Crowd: A discount.

Keith: Now to close. I gotta tell you the last thing and I'm done. Go to the slide. You guys, Nehemia only told you half of the story. This is me in Egypt. Now, he likes to take credit that it was all about me copying Nehemia, but I want to give him a secret.

The reason I wanted to go to Egypt is that when I open my Bible, I see Egypt too many times. And I didn't care that Mubarak had just been kicked out and it was dangerous. I'm not afraid of danger when I'm walking in purpose. When I'm there with Nehemia and he's the one that says, “You know what? If he goes by himself, he might end up having more stories than me. I better go with him.”

So, here's what we did. I'm almost done, Michael. Here's what we did. We go into Egypt. Nobody is going into Egypt the week after Mubarak gets kicked out. Everybody is leaving Egypt except for me and Nehemia. In fact, it was so bad that the man that was supposed to do the deal, you know, the person that's behind the booth, he wasn't even there. He was out taking a nap somewhere. They're thinking, “Nobody's coming into Egypt except for Keith and Nehemia.”

We go into Egypt. I will not bore you, but something happened to me also. Here's what it was. As we're in Egypt, we're here, the same picture that Nehemia showed. We're there by the water and I'm out and I'm praying. And there's nobody on the beach. All I hear are the Muslim prayers. That's it. Nobody else is there except for me and Nehemia. Then he and I do something really radical. He walked up the mountain. Last time I said, “No way,” because I'm carrying the backpack because he feigned that his neck was hurt. And he said, “Keith, I can't go unless you carry the backpack.” So, guess what I did? Somebody say, “Keith is smart.”

Crowd: Keith is smart.

Keith: I hired a camel. You guys, I want to close with this. We get to the top of this mountain, and what I love about what Michael is going to do tonight, he's going to share information with you about the real Mount Sinai. But can I tell you something? So many of you are just like the Egyptians that are saying this: “But I'm very comfortable on the mountain that we call ‘Mount Sinai.’ I'm very comfortable with the pronunciation I've always known. I'm very comfortable with the information I've always had. I'm very comfortable with the tradition that makes me comfortable.” But God is saying, “We're gonna have to move from our place of comfort to the real Mount Sinai,” not only with the information about the mountain, but the information about His name.

As I got to the top of the mountain, I heard three words. I had trekked up to the top. And as I'm looking across the mountain, I heard my Father say this. If you put the slide up, He said this. “You have learned.” Father, teach me to love what You love. And Yehovah, teach me to hate what You hate. Ten years later, I only heard three words. “You have learned.” I’ve learned to love what He loves. And for those of you that judged me ahead of time because you heard I was a Methodist Pastor, don't be fooled. I've learned to hate what He hates. Can I get an Amen on that?

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: And my simple prayer is this. Three opportunities, time, Torah and His name, pick a door. Pick a door. I don't care which door you pick. You want to pick time? You want to pick Torah? You want to pick His name? Get on the other side of the door and your life will change.

Tonight, after we get a chance to see this movie and see this information…You all, it's a special thing. Tonight, if you're with your wife, tell your wife, “Hey honey, sanctify.” With your kids, “Sanctify.” Friends, “Sanctify.” Call friends, tell them, “Get to Dallas, get to the hotel.” If there are people in the city, call them. People who are online, “If you can get here, get here.” Because I will tell you something and will not take it back. Yehovah has it on His calendar to meet with us in Dallas.

I want to close with this. I simply want to blow the shofar as a sign to awaken what is in you that needs to be awakened. And if you feel it, and if you hear it, and it awakened something in you, do not be slack. Respond.

Keith: [blows shofar] Thank you, Father, for Your goodness and Your grace. Thank you for Your faithfulness. Thank You for the fights in our life. Thank You for how you've prepared us. Now help us to be ambassadors of your name, that we'll be like David, that we'll kneel down in humility and get our five smooth stones, that we might face the one who curses our God. Take the name and put it into his forehead, that he might fall face down. We bless You. We thank You. We glorify You, and we magnify You on behalf of Your name, Yehovah, which is holy. We thank You, God. And everybody say it together, “Amen.”

Crowd: Amen.

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The Name of God with Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series – Part 3)

In Part 3 of the Open Door Series, Nehemia Gordon explains how the name of God, sacred to both Jews and Christians, has become hidden by time and tradition. Beginning with Roman persecution forbidding Jews to speak the name through rabbinical adaptations, translation errors and other misunderstandings, the one and only name of the Lord was superseded over time by titles—like “El Shaddai,” or “Adonai”. As the exiles of Israel and the others joined with them to return to the Promised Land, the name of the Lord Yehovah is again being sanctified and exalted.

Transcript

The Name of God with Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series - Part 3)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Nehemia: All right, thank you very much. It’s great to be here in Texas, and I'm gonna continue talking to you a little bit about the Hebrew origins of the Lord's Prayer. I really only touched on a very small part of it, and even after this presentation, it will be a very small part of it. There's so much deepness and richness once you get into the Hebrew.

Over here, I have a picture of another manuscript of Hebrew Matthew. Before, we saw one from the British Library; this one is from Florence, Italy. And here, we can see the second line of the prayer. It starts, “Our Father in heaven,” and then it says in Hebrew, “Yitkadesh shimkha. Say, “Yitkadesh.”

Crowd: Yitkadesh.

Nehemia: Shimkha.

Crowd: Shimkha.

Nehemia: And that's really a powerful statement, because in English, we usually translate that, “Hallowed be Thy name.” What does that really mean, “Hallowed be Thy name?” It's kind of like this vague statement, “Your name is holy.” But when you look at it in Hebrew, and in Greek, the Hebrew and Greek here are identical, it means literally, “May Your name be sanctified,” which grammatically is a call to action. And Keith is gonna talk more about that, I won't steal his thunder. But “May Your name be sanctified” is a call to action. It begs the question, if we're sanctifying the name of our heavenly Father, what is His name? What is the name of our heavenly Father? And that's what the prayer is, too, our Father in Heaven.

About a year ago, I was speaking to this group of charismatic prayer warriors. And some of them were praying in tongues, and they were all over the place. And one lady was praying with Hebrew names; she was calling upon the Father using various Hebrew names. And when I was presenting on this, I said, “Okay, I'm going to pick on her and ask her, ‘What, ma'am, is the name of our Father in Heaven?’” And she said, “Well, is it El Shaday? Is it El Elyon?” And she threw out a whole bunch of titles; those are beautiful, wonderful titles of the King of Creation, but He only has one name. And that is a name that He gave and revealed to Moses when Moses asked the exact same question, “What is the name that I should tell the Israelites? You've appeared to me in the burning bush, said, ‘Go to the Israelites,’ and I'm gonna say, ‘The God of our forefathers has appeared to me.’ I need to be more specific.”

And why is that? Because their forefathers worshipped lots of gods. It says that when Terakh and Nakhor, the fathers of Abraham, were across the river, they had many, many gods. And in Egypt there were many, many gods. There was Ra and there was Ba'al from Canaan. There were more gods than we could possibly count.

So, Moses, when he appears before God at the burning bush, he says, “God, what name should I tell them?” And the answer comes in Exodus 3:15. God says, “Thus shall you say to the children of Israel,” and then we have this four-letter name. And as Keith says, when we get to this name a lot of people will shut down, they'll say, “There's controversy. I don't want to deal with this, because there are different opinions on how to pronounce this name.” In the earliest Hebrew manuscripts that have vowels, it's written “Yehovah.” Some people say it's “Yahweh” or “Yahuwa.”

And I've actually been invited to speak at some places, and they’ve said, “We want to hear you speak. You have so many things for us that we need to hear, but only if you pronounce the name, ‘Yahuwehi,’” or some other pronunciation. Everybody has a theory out there, and a lot of them will say, “If you don't pronounce it this exact way, then you have lost your salvation. Lake of fire for you, if you don't pronounce it our way.” And I'm not coming up here and telling you, “You have to pronounce God's name this particular way, or that particular way.” I say, search it out for yourself, study it for yourself. Keith Johnson has a great book he'll talk about, “His Hallowed Name Revealed Again,” an amazing book, it goes into some evidence. But at the end of the day, you need to work it out for yourself, in fear and trembling, with prayer and study.

Again, I've said, based on the earliest Hebrew manuscripts I pronounce it “Yehovah.” If you want to replace that with “Yahweh,” knock yourselves out. God said to Moses, “Thus, you say to the children of Israel, ‘Yehovah,’ or ‘Yahweh,’ the God of your fathers has sent me to you. This is My name forever. This is My memorial for every generation.”

Now, how do I know this name is still relevant today? And again, I don't want opinions or theories. Based on this verse, how do I know that the name is still relevant today in the 21st century? Because maybe that name was only relevant for the answer that God was giving Moses at that very moment. Maybe what he was saying to Moses is, “Right now, when you go to the Israelites tell them this name, and tomorrow I'll have some other name.” How do I know it's still relevant today, based on the verse? It says forever. Are we still in forever?

Crowd: Yes.

Nehemia: I think we are, to the best of my knowledge, last time I checked. And the Hebrew phrase "forever" is actually two words, “le'olam.” Say, “le'olam.”

Crowd: Le'olam.

Nehemia: We translate this "forever,” but what it literally means is “the universe.” And what you're saying when you say "le'olam" is, “for the duration of the universe.” As long as heaven and earth continue to exist, this will be true. That's what "le'olam" means. And he's saying, “As long as the universe continues to exist...” And after it ceases to exist, it won't really be of much interest to us, because we'll be dead, and so will all of our descendants. “But forever, for the existence of the universe, this is My name forever and for every generation.” And we're still in every generation, the last I checked, as well.

Now, when I was studying this with Keith, he kept asking that same question. He said, “I shook the tree, nothing fell out. How do I know this is relevant for my people?” And we looked in scripture to find the answer; don't want opinions. And here's what we found, many verses, but this is one in particular. Psalm 148 11-13. It says, “Kings of the earth, and all peoples.” Say, “All peoples.”

Crowd: All peoples.

Nehemia: “Kings of the earth and all peoples, princes and all judges of the earth, both young men and maidens, old men and children, let them praise the name of Yehovah, for His name alone is exalted, his glory is above the earth and heaven.” This is in my Bible, as a Jew, and this is in your Bible as Christians, Messianics. This is in all of our Bibles.

Now, if you look in a lot of your Bibles, you won't see this, though. You'll see that in place of the name, “Yehovah” or “Yahweh,” it'll say, “LORD.” Now, why is that? And a lot of people will ask me, “Why isn't this in my Bible?” Now, this is the title page of the original 1611 King James Version, as it actually descended down from the clouds of heaven. That's how it was written, right? No? Oh, that's what I was told. Anyway, this is the original 1611 King James Version, the title page. And if you look here, you can see the biblical world as it was understood by the translators. Over here, we have Aaron with the breastplate and Moses with the 10 Commandments, the tablets. Up here is the lamb, what does that represent? You sound not sure. Okay, up here is this bird, this dove, what does that represent? And up here, the Father in heaven up in the clouds, it says “Yehovah” in Hebrew. This is an enlarged picture of it. It actually says “Yehovah” on the cover page of the 1611 King James Version.

So, somebody tells you, “Well, it doesn't appear in my English Bible. In my Bible, it only says ‘LORD.’” Tell them, “In the original one from 1611, it had it on the title page.” Now, it is preserved in seven places in the King James, and in those verses the translators decided, “If we write here ‘LORD,’ it won't make any sense.” For example, Psalm 83:18, “That men may know that Thou whose name alone is Jehovah...” And remember, if you're aware of this, in 1611 the J was interchangeable with the I, and it's actually spelled six times with a J, once with an I. So, they would have read this as “Yehovah” back in 1611, which is pretty close, a different nuance of pronunciation. “That men may know that Thou whose name alone is Yehovah, are the Most High over all the earth.”

Now, here they realized, if we write "the LORD,” it'll change His name and it won’t make any sense, which is exactly what many translators have done. Like the NIV, which is, of course, the Nearly Inspired Version, we said, they've written "the LORD.” And most translations have replaced it with "the LORD,” changing the eternal name of our Father. Now to be fair, what they did is they wrote it in capital letters. And if you read the introduction to your Bible... Who here reads the introduction to their Bible? I mean, we could barely get people to read the Bible. The introduction, most people don't read it. There's a saying in Hebrew, “A few righteous men in Sodom.” So, we've got a few righteous men in Arlington here, but most of you are not reading the introduction and I don't blame you. And so, I think it's actually kind of misleading. But they do tell you if you read the fine print, that it originally is the name “Yehovah,” or “Yahweh,” the tetragrammaton they call it, the four-letter name. And that four-letter name, which in Hebrew is four letters, Yud, say, “Yud.”

Crowd: Yud.

Nehemia: Hey.

Crowd: Hey.

Nehemia: Vav.

Crowd: Vav.

Nehemia: Hey.

Crowd: Hey.

Nehemia: That's the four-letter name of the Father. It appears in the Hebrew Bible, in the Old Testament, 6,000...Say, “6,000.”

Crowd: 6,000.

Nehemia: 800.

Crowd: 800.

Nehemia: And 28.

Crowd: And 28.

Nehemia: 6,828 times. That’s in my Bible, on average, seven times per page, depending on the size of your font and everything. But seven times per page is a lot. It's about 1,000 pages. That's actually more than all the titles put together, more than “Lord,” and "Lord" actually legitimately appears as “Adonay” in the Hebrew. “Adonay” is the Hebrew for “Master,” or Lord. It appears, “Elohim,” “God,” “El Shaday” appears, “El Elyon,” “Most High God,” I'll talk a little bit more about that tomorrow. And those legitimate titles appear less altogether than the name of the Father Himself, 6,828 times. Now, that's obviously an important name, isn't it? I would think so. Sounds important. He likes to hear His name. He says it a lot.

Now, the reason we don't say the name and you see it in our English Bibles, is our English translators learned how to translate Hebrew from Jewish Rabbis. And the Rabbis taught them a tradition I was raised with, that whenever you see the name of our Heavenly Father, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, which appears in the Hebrew text… It's not missing from the Hebrew text.

You know, I'll hear from a lot of people, “Oh, the Jews came along and removed the name from the Bible.” No, 6,828 times, that's not removed. What we were taught is whenever you see that name, to read it as "Lord,” as “Adonay.” So, that's tradition, that's not scripture.

Now, there's an older tradition, one that predates this tradition I was raised with. It goes back probably to up until the middle of the 2nd century. And this is recorded in the Mishnah, the writings of the early Rabbis. They say, “A man is required to greet his fellow using the name.” Now, I don't quote this as an authority that we're required to do this today. What I'm saying is that this was their original Jewish tradition, that predates the tradition of not speaking the name, the one that most Jews today will be familiar with. Now, this tradition that the Rabbis talk about here, that a man is required to greet his fellow using the name, they didn't pluck that out of the thin air. They tell us that they took this from the Book of Ruth, 2:4. And there it says, “Behold, Boaz was coming from Bethlehem. And he said to the harvesters, ‘Yehovah be with you.’ And they said to him, ‘Yehovah bless you.’” That was the greeting in ancient Israel. When someone was coming, you blessed him in the name of Yehovah, in the name of what we later translated as "LORD.” Does that sound familiar from anywhere, to bless someone who comes in the name of the Lord?

And actually, in the New Testament, when Yeshua comes, arguably there's a dual meaning there, that they're blessing him in the name of the Lord as he's coming, in the name of His Father, according to the New Testament, “Yehovah.” And he's also coming, according to the New Testament, in that name, as well. So, the New Testament says, is that right? It says there, “He came in the name of His Father,” which is a pretty neat trick if he never uses that name. How do you come in the name you never speak? I don't know. So, this earlier tradition predates the ban on the name that we're familiar with, that I grew up with. I was taught, whenever you see those letters, read them as a different word.

This is a tomb in the Galilee. How many people have been to this tomb in the Galilee? One man? What is the name of this tomb, who's buried here? You don't know. And you probably weren't actually there. Keith was there. This is the tomb of a Rabbi named Hananiah Ben Teradion, or Hanina Ben Teradion, according to some pronunciations. It's actually on the top of a hill in the middle of nowhere. It's not marked on any maps. It's not a secret where it is, but you have to really dig to find that information. And the Rabbi who’s buried in this tomb is a Rabbi who was executed by the Romans, he was martyred. He was actually burned at the stake.

We're told by the rabbinical sources that this Rabbi was taken and he was wrapped in a Torah scroll, and they put wet tufts of wool between him and the Torah scroll to slow the burning, and then they lit him on fire. And why did they do that, according to the Talmud? Because he spoke the name of the Father the way it is written. Whenever he came upon the name, Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, and he was teaching in public, he would proclaim the name, “Yehovah.” And the Romans in the time of the Hadrianic persecutions, which ended in the year 138, banned the speaking of the name.

The tradition not to speak the name comes from shortly after that. And what happened is, the Rabbis realized, “If we keep speaking this name, we're going to be put to death.” Now, whatever you say about the Rabbis, one thing that we're very good at is adapting. They saw a threat and they said, “Okay, the Romans will kill us if we do this. We're going to do something similar, as best as we can do. When the Messiah comes, He'll drive them out of Israel, and we'll be all fine.” And they thought that would happen next week, or next month, or next year. They didn't think we'd be here 1,600 years later, or 1,800 years later, still waiting for that, for the Messiah to come and reign as the flesh and blood King over Israel.

Another famous example of that is the calendar. The Romans came and abolished the Sanhedrin, forbade the Jews to proclaim the monthly sighting of the new moon. And what did the Rabbis do? They said, “We'll adapt. When the Messiah comes next week, He'll restore the original calendar, or next month or next year. Until then, we'll follow this approximated calculating system.” There are Rabbis in Israel to this day, or in modern times, who say, “Whenever the Messiah comes, may it be today...” they pray every day, “May it be speedily in our days, we will restore the biblical calendar.” So, this method of adapting is what brought us the ban on speaking the name. No one ever thought it would last forever. And the Rabbis knew it wouldn't last forever because of this verse in Zacharia 14:9. It says there, “Yehovah shall be King over the entire earth, and on that day Yehovah will be one,” say, “One.”

Crowd: One.

Nehemia: “And His name will be one,” say, “One.”

Crowd: One.

Nehemia: “And in that end time, all mankind will call upon His name.” There's another verse like this in Zephaniah 3:9. It says there, let me read it from the Bible. I don't have a slide for this. Zephaniah 3:9, it's a powerful verse. Zephaniah is one of those little books hidden away here. Oh, here it is. Zephaniah 3:9, I'll read it to you from Hebrew. It says, “Ki az e'hefokh el amim safa berura likro khulam beshem Yehovah le'ovdo shekhem ekhad,” “For then I will turn the nations to a pure tongue.” And that's a Hebrew expression, “A pure language,” it means. “To all call upon the name of Yehovah to serve Him.” And it usually is translated, “With one accord.” It literally says, “With one shoulder.” It's describing an image of all mankind gathered together, serving Yehovah, standing shoulder to shoulder, calling upon His name, in that pure language, the original language, the language from before the Tower of Babylon.

If you read in the Torah, you can see very clearly that original language is Hebrew. You know, we see all these names of people. Remember, Yeshua and Yoshia? Yeshua, “He will save,” in Hebrew Matthew. You have that throughout the first 10 chapters of Genesis, people who are named things that only make sense in Hebrew. Adam, Eve, Seth, all these people's names are Hebrew names. The original language will be restored when the Messiah comes and sits on the throne of David. Can I get an Amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Nehemia: Okay. The Rabbis admit this. It says this in the Talmud. It says, “This world is not like the world to come.” When the Rabbis say “the world to come" in this literature, they're talking about the reign of the Messiah here on earth as a flesh and blood king. They say, “In this world the name is written ‘Yehovah’ and read ‘Adonay.’” That's the tradition I was raised with, that started in the 2nd century. “In the world to come it will be one,” say “One.”

Crowd: One.

Nehemia: “Written Yehovah and read Yehovah.” And what's the proof for this? How do they know this? They quote that verse from Zachariah, that's how they know His name will be one. I want to share something that happened with the name. This is when Keith and I were traveling around South Africa. Can we see the slide? Here I'm standing in front of a place called Khayelitsha. Say, “Khayelitsha.”

Crowd: Khayelitsha.

Nehemia: This is what they call a township. Say, “Township.”

Crowd: Township.

Nehemia: This is a place in South Africa that Keith and I were not supposed to go to. We were not supposed to be there. We were traveling around, speaking at these nice middle-class venues, and all of a sudden, Keith has this burning desire to go and meet with the people living in these townships. These townships, they're very poor places, by and large. Khayelitsha is a place of 400,000 people living in these shacks with tin roofs. And we were told by some of the folks that in the winter it gets cold, and they heat their houses with kerosene. And they're living in wooden shacks with tin roofs. And sometimes, there’ll be fires that just sweep through whole areas of it, burning up people, and burning up their possessions, and killing people. I can't even imagine what it's like to live there. They have outhouses, and when you're there you smell what that means. You know, seeing it is one thing, seeing the picture, but smelling it, that's really the experience.

Well, Keith wanted us to go to Khayelitsha. And I said, “Why on earth would I want to go to Khayelitsha?” That's not on our itinerary; we had a very tight itinerary. In fact, the lady who organized our itinerary over there in South Africa, she said, “What would you like to do, besides speaking? Would you want to go to Kruger National Park or various other things?” I said, “Any spare time we have, let's fill it up with more speaking venues. I'm not a tourist, I got plenty of tourism in Israel. I'm not going there to see the sights. I want to speak.”

So, we were there for something like I believe, 16 days, and we had, I believe it was 14 venues. It was insane, I actually completely lost my voice. Well, so Keith wants to squeeze in the middle of this some township that I’d never even heard of. And he didn't have a particular one he wanted to go to. He just said, “We need to get to one of the townships, see how the real people live.” We were sitting, I remember, one evening in this home and I had... what you all call, when you go to Mexico, you Americans call this “Montezuma's revenge.” I came to call this in South Africa, “Shaka Zulu's revenge.” You know what I'm talking about, right?

Okay, so I'm there in South Africa and I'm suffering from Shaka Zulu's revenge. And I'm sitting on the couch, and I'm holding my stomach and I'm moaning. And Keith says, “We need to go to one of the townships.” I'm like, “We drove three-and-a-half hours, and spoke for three hours, me two-and-a-half hours of it, and I'm ready to go to sleep.” And the man sitting there whose house we were in, he said, “Well, you guys are driving back tomorrow morning to Cape Town to catch a flight, and I happen to know a Christian Pastor who lives in one of the townships.” And Keith said, “Tell me more.” Well, the man said, “It's a small little township, 400,000 people living in tin shacks.” He didn't tell us that part, we found that out later. He said, “It's a little township called ‘Khayelitsha.’”

Now, when he said “Khayelitsha,” this man, everyone in the room was muttering and talking, and they were having these conversations, it went dead silent. There was dead silence. And there was one woman there who grew up in Cape Town. And she said, in her thick Afrikaans accent, “You just go to Khayelitsha and they kill you.” And I'm thinking, “This is probably not a place we want to go to. I don't think we should be going there.” Of course, that only encouraged Keith. You couldn't have said anything more to encourage him.

So, we make the phone call, and we're talking to this Pastor in Khayelitsha. We have a flight out at something like 9:30, or 10 am. We're supposed to meet him at the entrance of Khayelitsha at seven in the morning. We can't go into it ourselves, because if we take a wrong turn, we're dead. I mean, this is not a place you want to get lost. He meets us at the entrance, and he takes us. And finally, we get there and he's telling us how his church was built. He actually lived in the back of his brick church, in his tiny little room with his wife and children, in one little room. And he was one step above his neighbors, because they're living in the tin roof shacks made of wood. So, he has actually brick outside. And he's telling us how the bricks were donated, and the mortar was donated by a second person. And a third person came and mixed them together and helped him build the place. I mean, it was poverty you can't even imagine.

And he's telling us the story and he's so excited and animated. And finally, he says, “Well, tell me about you guys, where are you from?” And I start to tell him, “I'm from Israel. I've lived there since 1993, blah, blah, blah.” He says, “Whoa, stop. Did you say Israel?” I said, “Yeah, I live in Jerusalem, Israel. I have since ‘93.” He says, “Do you speak Hebrew?” And I said, “Yeah.” Remember, this is a man who is what's known as a “Xhosa,” which is one of the 11 tribes of South Africa, 11 languages of South Africa. And this Xhosa man is asking me if I speak Hebrew, and I said, “Yes, of course I speak Hebrew. I've lived in Israel for many years.”

He starts to tell me, he says, “About seven years ago, I had a dream. And in that dream,” he says, “I saw four Hebrew letters.” Now, if you tell someone in English, “I'm thinking of a four-letter English word,” you're thinking of a cuss word, right? You tell someone in Hebrew, “I'm thinking of a four-letter word,” what do you think of? You think of the tetragrammaton, the four-letter name. That's the first thing that came to my mind.

And I'm thinking, “Could it be that God gave this dream to this African Pastor, a Christian Pastor?” Remember, I'm Jewish. Christian Pastors, as I understand the universe, are not supposed to get visions and dreams, certainly not of the Hebrew name of the God of Israel. What is going on here? And I say to him, “Can you write down what you saw?” He said, “No, I cannot write Hebrew.” And so, I said, “Okay, bring me a pen and paper, and I'll write it out and maybe you can recognize it.” He brings the pen, and I start to write out, “Yud,” say, “Yud.

Crowd: Yud.

Nehemia: Hey.

Crowd: Hey.

Nehemia: Vav.

Crowd: Vav.

Nehemia: Hey.

Crowd: Hey.

Nehemia: And I show it to him. And he looks at it, and he says, “Well, that's kind of what I saw.” And as he says that, he's actually writing it in air letters. And I'm thinking, “Why can't he recognize it?” He's actually writing it out right in front of me. What's going on here? And Keith, who's been silent the whole time, he's very patient with me. He walks over, and he looks over my shoulder, and he gives me that look, that quintessential Keith look, like, “What? Ma zeh?” And he says, “Nehemia, I can read Hebrew and I can barely read what you wrote.”

Now, it's true, my teachers always complained, I've always had horrible penmanship. So, Keith runs out, he actually leaves this little brick church, I don't know where he's going. He runs outside and he comes back, and what is he carrying? He's carrying a copy of his book. And I came to call this book his "little study,” ‘cause when he originally wrote it, it was essentially a study that he did really for himself. And he calls me up and he says, “Nehemia, I've done some research on the name of our Heavenly Father. Would you look at this little study I've done?” Or maybe I called it "little study.” I think I did. Over time, this study has grown to where now it's over 200 pages, and it's really a monumental masterpiece. You must get this book. Here is the cover. And he shows this Pastor the cover of his little study, and on it he sees these beautiful Hebrew letters. And without hesitation, the Pastor, what did he say, Keith?

Audience Member: “That is what I saw.”

Nehemia: He says, “That is what I saw. Those were the four letters.” Now, if someone was telling me this story, remember, I'm the skeptic, and God isn't supposed to be revealing His name to Christian Pastors. I would doubt this story, I'm totally honest with you, if I hadn't seen it for myself. And more than anything, it was seeing the look on his face. He was clearly recognizing something he'd seen before. And this happened, I'm like, “What's going on here?” You know, what you did up on the mountain, okay, I could forgive that. I can forgive you, God, because I'm a Litvak, after all. But why are you revealing your name to a Christian Pastor? What are you doing, God? You're out of control. Get back in the box. What are You doing?”

And what this has made me realize is the God of creation is bigger than the boxes that we've created for Him. And He's continuing to touch people's lives around the world with His name. Things are happening that I can't even believe. I'll talk tomorrow about Smithfield. I want to look at this verse in Acts 2:21. It says, “And it shall come to pass that whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved.” Now, this is a verse that appears as part of the scene in Acts 2, which is what's known as the “Pentecost event,” that is the Shavuot that happened 2,000 years ago. You all know what I'm talking about. And this is part of Simon Peter's Pentecost sermon.

And in the context of that sermon, 50 days…I guess, 53 days after that fateful event, what does this mean when he says, "the Lord?” What Lord is he talking about? And we could probably have debates from now until kingdom come. And the people on this side of the room would say, “When he says ‘the name of the Lord,’ he means Yeshua.” And the other side of the people would say, “He says ‘the name of the Lord,’ he means the Father.” And how would we ever know? I mean, really, we would never know. We could even start entire denominations, you know, that's what they do. They'll take the most obscure thing and say, “Okay, because we can't understand this verse, and we have our truth that we’ve received, this is where we're gonna draw the line as our denomination.”

And if we think about this, what does this mean, we really would never know, if we only had this verse. But there's another verse, and that's a verse in the Book of Joel. And if you have a good reference Bible, you already know the answer, that Peter was not only quoting this one verse, he was quoting an entire section from the Prophet Joel. And in the Prophet Joel, what he says, there in Acts it says, “And it shall come to pass that whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved.” In Joel it says, “And it shall come to pass to whosoever shall call the on name of Yehovah shall be saved,” Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, the tetragrammaton, that four letter word. That's the name that it says in Joel.

Now, when Simon Peter’s saying this in Jerusalem on Pentecost, on Shavuot, in the Feast of Weeks, presumably he's speaking in Jerusalem next to the Temple, in Hebrew. That was the language of discourse in Israel, and certainly, it would be the language in the synagogue and when you were giving sermons. And if he's reading Joel, Joel's already in Hebrew, he doesn't have to even translate it. So, if he's reading this in Hebrew in the Book of Joel... And remember, this is 100 years before that other Rabbi was put to death, burned at the stake for speaking the name of Yehovah in public, burned at the stake by the Romans. The Romans martyred him, not the Rabbis.

Now, what would Peter have been saying in the 1st century, 100 years before that Rabbi died? Presumably, he'd actually be quoting Joel verbatim, word for word, with the name “Yehovah.” Now, how can we know for sure? And I guess we can't ever know for sure, unless we go back in time. But here's a clue, and I think it's a powerful clue. This is a page from the Dead Sea Scrolls. This is actually from a Dead Sea Scroll from a place called Nakhal Khever. Most of the Dead Sea Scrolls come from where?

Crowd: Qumran.

Nehemia: Qumran is a city on the shore of the Dead Sea. There are several other places where they’ve found scrolls, some of them from different periods. The ones from Nakhal Khever were placed there in the year 135 during the time of the Bar Kokhba uprising. That was an uprising against the Romans. It was part of the whole Hadrianic persecutions. Here in this Scroll, which is actually of Zachariah 8:23 through chapter 9:2. We could probably stop for a minute and talk about 8:23, that's a very important verse. What does it say there in 8:23 of Zachariah? Someone read it.

There, it talks about how 10 men of all the languages shall grab hold of the Jewish man. Is that right? Okay, that's for another sermon. Here in this Dead Sea Scroll, what I want to talk about is the name. This is in Greek, the Greek translation of the Book of Zachariah. And here, there are two words on the page that appear that are not Greek words. Does everybody see those words? You don't have to be a Greek scholar to see these words. It appears here and it appears here, and that is the name “Yehovah” written in what's called “Paleo-Hebrew.” Paleo-Hebrew is the original Hebrew script that was used before the Babylonian exile. When the Jews came back from Babylon, they gradually replaced the original Hebrew script with what we call in Hebrew the “Assyrian script.” That was the script used to write Aramaic, the language of the Gentiles. And when they wrote Hebrew, their Hebrew was heavily influenced by Aramaic, and they even used the Aramaic script to write their language. But when it came to the name of the Father, they wrote it out in Paleo-Hebrew.

Now, why did they do that in the Septuagint? For a number of reasons, but primarily because this name was considered so holy, it couldn't be written out in this Greek language, that they decided to write it out in the original language. And the problem came about when Gentile scribes came along, ‘cause remember, this up here, this is a Jewish copy of the Book of Zachariah in Greek. Most of the copies we have of the Book of Zachariah in Greek are Gentile copies from about 200 years later. And almost all of those have replaced the name “Yehovah” with what by then was standard Jewish tradition, where instead of Yehovah they said "Lord.” And in Greek, the word for Lord is “Kurios.” Say, “Kurios.”

Crowd: Kurios.

Nehemia: And Kurios is a very curious word. Not my best material, I admit this. So, this word “Kurios” replaces it in most of the manuscripts of the Old Testament in Greek, except for a handful of them, about five of them. And in those handful, it actually has the name of Yehovah written not in Paleo-Hebrew letters but in Greek letters. Now, how did they do that? Let's look and see what they did.

They had the name, Yehovah, and they said, “We can’t write this in Paleo-Hebrew letters. No one on earth will know what this is. We've got to replace it with Greek letters.” And they said, “Well, this kind of looks like a Greek letter, and so does this.” What is this actually? If you read it right to left, this is “Yud-Hey-Vav-Hay. And they said, “Okay, the hey looks like what Greek letter?” What Greek letter does it look like? It looks a little bit like the Greek letter pi, like we use in mathematics to this day, 3.14. And so, instead of the two heys, they wrote pi and pi. And they didn't know what this was, the vav, or what that was, the yud. And in place of those, they decided, “Okay, after every consonant in Greek, we have to write a vowel.” And the vowels they decided to write were the Greek letter iota or ayota, you may know that as. So, they ended up with pi iota pi iota. And this word in Greek is pronounced “peepee.” No, I'm serious, “peepee.”

And there were actually several manuscripts of the Old Testament in Greek, where it says, “And peepee spoke unto Moses saying, ‘Thus sayeth peepee to the Prophets.” Even in Greek this sounded utterly ridiculous, and they said, “We've got to get peepee out of our Bibles.” And eventually, they said, “Okay, the Jews have now, under Roman pressure, decided to replace Yehovah with Lord, with Adonay. So, we’ll write “Kurios,” this curious word that replaces it.

Now, that's a fact that that happened in the Old Testament, ‘cause we have the documents to show it. What happened in the New Testament? That's speculation. You know, I try to stay away from speculation. But certainly, we see that happening in the Old Testament, and I think it's reasonable to suggest that it may have happened in the New Testament. Either way, even in Greek, what was written in Peter's words was probably the word “Yehovah” in Paleo-Hebrew, in the original Greek of Acts, which of course we don't have. We have copies, of copies, of copies from 200, 300 years later.

Okay, I want to talk about this really quickly. I'm going to try to end early, to give Keith a little bit of extra time, because I took so much of his time before. But before that, I want to talk about why I think it's so important. You know, Yeshua preached this message, teaching people to sanctify the name of the Father. And when I first started going out with Keith and was talking about this, I had no intention of talking about the name. I thought, “Well, everybody knows about the name of Yehovah, I don't need to talk about that.” There are so many other things. I mean, there's a powerful message of reconciliation, actually, in the prayer, “Forgive us the debt of our sins as we forgive the debts of those who sinned against us.” There are so many deep messages there just in that section, that the first time I preached on this, it was on that topic. And I didn't even mention this whole issue of the name.

And the reason I decided to share this thing on the name is something in this passage in Isaiah 56. And here, to understand this passage, we have to put ourselves in the mindset of the Prophet. We have to go back 2,700 years. Isaiah preached in the 8th century BC. He was very active during the time of the Assyrian invasions in 732, 721 and 701. Those were the three invasions. He preached before those invasions and after those invasions. His message, he would stand up in the public square, get on top of a soapbox, and he would say, “Thus sayeth Yehovah.” And that's how this prophecy opens. So, let's try to put ourselves back 2,700 plus years in the time of Isaiah, and hear his words, “Thus says Yehovah, ‘Keep judgment and do righteousness, for My salvation is close to coming, and My righteousness to be revealed.’”

By the way, what's the Hebrew word for “salvation?” Actually, the Hebrew word for salvation is “yeshu'a.” You might think that's splitting hairs, but it's an important difference. Yeshua is derived from this word, but the word is a slightly different word. “My salvation, yeshu'a, is close to coming and My righteousness to be revealed.” And then it says, “Blessed is the man who does it, and the son of Adam who grabs hold of it. He who keeps the Sabbath from desecrating it…” I'm reading from the Hebrew, “and keeps his hand from doing all evil.”

Now, if you were a Jew, and you were walking by in the public square and you heard the Prophet standing on the soapbox, preaching these words, would you think this applied to you? Presumably, you would, there'd be no question that this applied to you. But what if you were a Gentile in Jerusalem at that time? You were one of those eunuchs of the kings, who were the ambassadors from all over the world. Jeremiah talks about these ambassadors as the way he spread his message to the nations. He would preach to them, they spoke Hebrew, and they would then go out and convey the message all over the ancient world.

In Isaiah's time, if you were one of those men, those Gentiles sent by your king to Jerusalem, or if you were a merchant who had settled in Jerusalem, and you heard the Prophet speaking these words, would you think it applied to you? You'd probably think, “Well, he says ‘man’ and he says, ‘son of Adam,’ and it's true I'm a man. And it's true I'm a son of Adam, but he talks about the Sabbath and the covenant. And we know from Exodus that the Sabbath is the sign of the covenant between the God of Israel and the people of Israel.” And so, you might say to yourself if you were a Gentile in the 8th century BC, hearing Isaiah, “That doesn't apply to me. He's speaking to the Jews, not to me. He's speaking to those people who have a covenant between their God and them. Although I, as a Gentile, may believe in the God of Israel, I have no part of the Sabbath or that people.” And many people apparently thought that, because the very next words in verse 3 is Isaiah addressing those Gentiles. What it says in verse 3 is, he says, “Let not the son of the Gentile…” and the word there is “nekhar,” say, “Nekhar.”

Crowd: Nekhar.

Nehemia: Nekhar they translated “stranger” or “foreigner,” that's the Hebrew word for Gentile, undisputedly. “Let not the son of the Gentile who joins himself to Yehovah...” and the word for joining there, it's very interesting. It's the same root as the word “Levite.” If you look at the reason for the name Levite, look at the origin of it in Genesis. It has to do with Leah joining herself to her husband. Here it's speaking about the Gentiles who join themselves, who Levite themselves, say, “Levite.”

Crowd: Levite.

Nehemia: Who Levite themselves to Yehovah. “Let not them say, ‘Yehovah has surely separated me from His people.’” ‘Cause that's what many of them were thinking, “I don't really have anything to do with that God.” Or, “Even if I join myself to that God of Israel, I'm not really part of His people. I'm a separate category, I don't belong to His people.” He's saying, “You must not say that.” He then talks about the eunuchs; we'll skip over that for the sake of the children and go to verse 6. In verse 6, he says, “And the sons of the Gentiles who join themselves, who Levite themselves…” Say, “Levite.”

Crowd: Levite.

Nehemia: “Who Levite themselves to Yehovah to serve Him, and to love the name of Yehovah, to be His servants, all those who keep the Sabbath from desecrating it, and grab hold of my covenant.” And this is one of the reasons, this verse, that I decided that I need to go and include this part of Yeshua's message of sanctifying the name.

And it was really something that happened, now we're coming on two years ago, when Keith and I were speaking over, I believe it was in Colorado. And Keith had talked about the name and I had sort of mentioned it. And then, we were sitting in the home of this man afterwards, who was our host there. They usually don't put us up in these nice hotels like they do here, we're usually in people's houses. We're in this man's house. Keith was sitting there in the living room with him. I was in the dining room, munching on a bowl of shredded wheat, which I like to eat after my presentations. I'm sitting there and I'm chomp, chomp, chomp, and Keith is talking to the man back and forth, and they're talking about the name. Now, this man is what I would call -- and I hope this doesn't offend anybody -- but he's what I call a “Jewabe.” Have you met some of those people, a Jewabe? A Jew wannabe? And I'm not saying that to insult him. I guess, I'm being a little bit obnoxious, but what I mean is he loved God, he loved the God of Israel. And being a Christian, he realized, “Okay, Jesus is a Jew. I want to be like the Jews.” Just like that messianic Gentile I met all those years ago, this man wanted to be like the Jews, and he emulated the Jews in all kinds of ways. The man was in his 70s, and at his messianic congregation they did a bar mitzvah for him.

Now, you have to understand. A bar mitzvah, from where I come from, is what you do for 13-year-old boys. So, this man in his 70s is doing it. Okay, I'm sure for him that was very moving and beautiful. It sounds strange to me, but I could see from talking to him, and hearing him, that he loved God as much as I love God. And he's sitting there talking to Keith, and he says, “When I came into this whole thing of the Hebrew Roots, they told me, ‘Never speak the name ‘Jesus.’ Jesus is an evil name. Only call Him Yashua.’” That's what he was told. I'm not saying that. That's what he was told.

And one day he's thinking, and he says, “If I'm supposed to call the son ‘Yashua’ ‘cause that's His true name,” so they told him, “what should I call the Father?” And he went to his congregation leaders. And he said, “You told me to call the son ‘Yashua,’ what should I call the Father?” And they said to him, “You don't need to know that name.” And I remember, he’s sitting there and he says this to Keith, “They told me I don't need to know that name.” And Keith says, “It's in your Bible in Hebrew. I wish I could just show it to you.” And the man said, “But they told me I don't need to know that name.” And Keith says, “But I wish I could just show it to you.” And the man said, “They told me I don't need to know that name.” And Keith said, “I wish I could just show it to you.”

And I'm eating my shredded wheat, and I'm thinking, “Oh God, Keith, just go show it to him. Your Bible’s in the other room, just do it.” And then, the man got up from his own couch, and he was about to walk out of the room. He was about to walk out of his own living room. And I saw the fear in his eyes, the fear of being confronted with the name that his leaders had told him he didn't need to know, and he shouldn't know, that it was dangerous for him to know, that he needed to stay away from and avoid. And when I saw that, it broke my heart. It made me think of this verse which speaks about the son of the Gentile who joins himself to Yehovah, the one who loves the name of Yehovah. That's what it says in verse 6. “Who grabs hold of His covenant and keeps the Sabbath.” That someone like that would be told not to love the name, to fear the name of the Father, it broke my heart. And I realized, when Yeshua taught the multitudes and intended this message to go forth far beyond the Galilee, and He taught them to sanctify the name of the Father, he had an intention there for that name not to be hidden, not to be suppressed, not to be feared, but to be sanctified. Can I get an Amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Nehemia: Well, the prophecy doesn't end here. In verse 7, it says, “And I will bring them to My Holy mountain and I will make them rejoice in My house of prayer.” This is the most famous verse in the Bible, am I right, just about, in the Old Testament. “I'll make them rejoice in My house of prayer, their burnt offerings and peace offerings shall be accepted upon my altar, for my house should be called a house of prayer for all nations.” Say, “All nations.”

Crowd: All nations.

Nehemia: That phrase, “A house of prayer for all nations,” I mean, this whole congregation is named after it. It's one of the most famous verses in the Bible. Most people stop reading here. They got to the famous verse and we're done. But the next verse is the key verse to me, and this is verse 8.

Now, verse 8, I'm going to publicly share that this is a verse I don't believe. Uh-oh. Michael, you took a big risk. It might have been a mistake, I don't know, but this is a verse I do not believe. And let me read it to you and I’ll tell you why.

It says, “Thus says Lord Yehovah who gathers in the dispersed of Israel. ‘I will gather others unto those who I have gathered.’” And I don't believe this verse. I believe that God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh. And some people think I'm nuts for that. They think, “Oh, what are you talking about? It was billions of years.” I believe with every fiber of my being, that God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh, six literal days. That's what I believe, laugh at me if you want. But I don't know it for a fact. It's a belief. And why don't I know it for a fact? Because I wasn't there.

And I believe that God took my ancestors out of Egypt and gave us the 10 commandments on the anniversary of this day, 3,500 years ago. But I don't know it for a fact, ‘cause I wasn't there. This verse I don't need to believe, because I've lived this verse. And what I have up here is actually something I stumbled upon by accident. It's a page from… Can we get the slide? This is page from a ship's manifest, from the USS Mauritania. That's the name of my great-grandfather, and he was listed on the ship's manifest when he arrived at Ellis Island. I had no idea that he even went through Ellis Island. I actually had a 12-hour stopover in New York, and I said, “What am I going to do all day? I don't have any money. I'll go to Ellis Island, that's cheap.” And I end up there in Ellis Island, and there's a computer, and I go and I look up his name just for kicks, and I find it.

And I realize that this is the fulfillment of this prophecy. It talks here about God gathering Israel from the four corners of the earth. And I realize that I've literally been gathered in and privileged to walk the streets of Jerusalem, to breathe the air in Jerusalem. For 2,000 years my ancestors wandered the globe. They were on boats from this country to that country. Nowhere was their home, and finally, after 2,000 years, I get to live this prophecy. I don't need to believe this prophecy, I've lived it.

And I also realized at that time that if my ancestor hadn't been on this boat, I wouldn't be here today. The rest of the family who was left behind in Europe, they're all dead. I actually went to Yad Vashem, Israel's national Holocaust Memorial, and I typed in the name “Gordon.” I get a lot of people who say, “Oh, you're of Scottish ancestry, because you're Gordon.” But Gordon is actually a famous name of Lithuanian Jews.

And I was curious, how many Gordons were killed in the Holocaust? They actually had the names of about half the people killed in the Holocaust, three million names at Yad Vashem. You can go and type it in. I think you can even do it online. And I typed in the name "Gordon" there, and it gave 1,000 names, and then it stopped. It said, “We only give 1,000 names. You have to click for more results to get more.” I thought, “If he hadn't been on that boat, I just wouldn't be here today.” And so, it's a literal fulfillment of this prophecy, that He gathered me in from the diaspora, just like he promised 2,700 years ago.

I mean, when he said this 2,700 years ago, when Isaiah preached these words in the public square in Jerusalem, my ancestors hadn't even been exiled yet. They said, “What is this guy talking about? He's crazy. He gathers in the dispersed of Israel? We're here in Jerusalem. We're gonna defeat the Assyrians, we're gonna win and then we'll defeat anybody else who comes.” And then they were scattered twice, and then gathered back in like He promised.

And the reason that this is so powerful, I think, isn't just that He gathered me in and saved me and my entire family from the ovens of Europe. But I'm seeing all over the world, Keith, gathering in those others. I'm seeing on every continent, he's gathering people, and people who can't explain it. They shook the family tree, and nothing fell out. There's no Jews that they know of in their ancestry, but something's burning in their heart and it wasn't bad pizza. It's burning in their heart, and they know that the God of Israel is calling them to His covenant, and they can't explain why. And it's this prophecy. He said, “Just as I gather in the dispersed of Israel, I will gather others unto those who I have gathered.” This is what we're seeing all over the world.

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The Hebrew Gospel of Matthew with Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series – Part 2)

Open Door Series Part 2 features Nehemia Gordon speaking on the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew. Nehemia Gordon, a Karaite Jew and academic scholar, relates how he joined together with Keith Johnson, an African American Methodist pastor to study an original Hebrew version of the Gospel of Matthew. Gordon explains the flaws inherit in the best translations and explores the rich meaning in the word puns only present in the Hebrew text. He focuses on passages from the Lord’s Prayer, which led him to the realization that the concept of God as Father is also prevalent in the Tanakh (Old Testament). Gordon concludes with a moving account of a personal revelation of God’s Fatherly love and his willingness to carry the sin debt for us.

Transcript

The Hebrew Gospel of Matthew with Nehemia Gordon (Open Door Series - Part 2)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Nehemia: I’m going to talk to you today about A Prayer to Our Father, the book that Keith and I wrote on the Hebrew origins of the Lord’s Prayer. And we actually did the main research for this book about four years ago. Keith flew over to Israel where I’ve lived since 1993, and we travelled around the Galilee, searching for the place where Yeshua, Jesus, taught this prayer, what’s commonly known in the Christian world as the Lord’s Prayer. And here’s actually a picture of us from four years ago, when we were doing this. You could see, I looked a little bit different back then. I used to be black.

[laughter]

What’s really funny about this is, I used the same joke over, I believe it was in Kansas, a couple of years ago, and one woman walks up to me afterwards, and she has this confused look on her face. Let’s bring the picture up again. She has a confused look on her face, and she says, “How did you get your skin to be so white?” [laughter] No, I was the fat, white guy with hair. Okay, yeah.

Anyway, but really, I think this picture speaks a thousand words. What on earth am I, a Karaite Jew, doing together with Keith Johnson, who is an African-American Methodist pastor? It’s almost like the introduction to a joke, what on earth are we doing together? And we’re studying the Hebrew origins of what his people call the Lord’s Prayer. I mean, what on earth is that about?

And first, I have to explain what a Karaite Jew is. I explained a little bit yesterday.

Keith and I were speaking over, I believe it was in Ohio, about a year or two ago, and when we arrived there, the pastor, she sits us down before the presentation and she said, “Look, I didn’t really know much about you guys. My mentor told me that I need to have you come and speak at the church. I don’t really know what this is about, but I’ve been reading the literature, and I have just one question. What is a karate Jew?” [laughter] Huah! Huah! No. No, no, it’s not about martial arts. It’s Karaite Jew, say “Karaite”.

Audience: Karaite.

Nehemia: Karaites are Jews who believe strictly in the Old Testament, and I explained a little bit yesterday that many Jews today believe in the teachings of the rabbis, that these teachings were handed down by God to Moses on Mount Sinai. And as a Karaite Jew, I believe strictly in the written scripture, in the… what Jews call the Tanakh, or the Hebrew Bible. Christians refer to it as the Old Testament. And when I was growing up, I actually studied the written Scripture, and I would see there, “And the Lord spoke to Moses saying; And thus says the Lord.” And I saw in the words of the rabbis, one rabbi says one thing and another rabbi disagrees and says something else. And then I am told, “Both of those opinions of the rabbis aren’t just opinions - those are the words of the living God.” And I said, “This doesn’t make any sense,” and I went to my rabbis, to my teachers, and I said, “Surely, this is the word of God. We should embrace this, and love this, and live by this. And this other thing, it’s really interesting. It has some interesting statements, but it’s the words of men. And when it contradicts the word of God, we should cast it aside.”

And I thought I would be praised for this - that my name would be shouted from the rooftops for bringing this great revelation to the world. Instead, I was rebuked by my rabbis. They said, “You mustn’t say that. That’s what those heretics, the Karaites say.” And I said, “Tell me about these Karaites. They sound like they know what they’re talking about.” And I found out that throughout Jewish history, there always have been Jews who only believed in the written Scripture.

Well, one of the things I realized, studying Scripture, was that the rabbis had this immense power, and the power was through translation. They could take a verse, and through translation make it say the exact opposite of what it actually said in the text. And I realized at a very young age, I needed to learn to read the word of God, for me, the Tanakh, the Old Testament, in the original language.

I grew up going to a Jewish school, several Jewish schools, and was able to read the Torah by the time I graduated high school. But I wanted a much deeper knowledge than that, and so I decided to move to Israel in 1993, and I eventually studied at the Hebrew University and got my bachelor’s degree in Biblical Studies there, and archaeology. I did a double major, and did my master’s in Biblical Studies. And throughout these studies, I studied all kinds of ancient Jewish texts, that from my perspective, would shed light on my Bible. I was studying the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Apocrypha, and the Pseudepigrapha, and Josephus.

One of the texts I ended up studying was the New Testament. And I wasn’t reading it like many of you who are probably in the audience read it, as your Bible. I was reading it as an ancient Jewish document saying, “What light can this shed on ancient Judaism?” And particularly, I was looking at a problem I talked about yesterday in the Gospel of Matthew, and it was to me, absolutely fascinating. I was like a kid in the candy store. I’m reading this ancient text, and it’s blowing me away that no one else is really dealing with this Hebrew text.

And what I found is, most of the Jewish scholars, who are these great experts in Hebrew, have really very little interest in the New Testament. And on the other side, you have these Christian scholars who are these great experts in Greek, who really don’t master the Hebrew the way that they master the Greek language. And I realized, this text is falling through the cracks.

And one thing that really highlighted this for me is when I was looking at this one particular manuscript of Hebrew Matthew, one from St. Petersburg, Russia. And now, St. Petersburg, Russia, used to be called Leningrad. And in 1991, I believe it was, the Soviet Union fell, and after that, this library in St. Petersburg was opened up to the Jewish world. These Israeli scholars rushed over there and photographed everything in the library, because they didn’t know if a week later, or two weeks later, another coup would rise up and shut the gates again.

And so today, in Israel, in Jerusalem, they have a photographic collection of every single document there in St. Petersburg, which is the largest Jewish collection of Jewish manuscripts in the world, in St. Petersburg, Russia. I went to look at this one particular manuscript of Hebrew Matthew. Now, Hebrew Matthew wasn’t discovered by me, it was discovered by this professor at the University of Georgia, his name was George Howard. And George Howard was studying Hebrew Matthew, and he thought this was a translation from Latin or Greek, but he came to the conclusion at the end of his study that, wait a minute, this is not translated from Latin or Greek - this is an original Hebrew document.

Now, he based that study on nine manuscripts - not six, Keith, I’ve been trying to get him to remember that number for several years - nine, say, “nine”.

Audience: Nine.

Nehemia: George Howard had nine manuscripts, not six. And this manuscript that I was looking at from St. Petersburg was one that Howard didn’t have. Now, why didn’t he have it? Because he discovered this in 1987, back when I was in high school, and when I came along like 10 years later or so I had more than nine manuscripts available to me. And I looked at the one from St. Petersburg - I actually had to fill out a form and check it out from the librarian. It was kept in a special place. And when I came to return this microfilm of the manuscript, photographs of every page, the librarian said a very interesting thing to me. He said, “Was there anything interesting in that manuscript?” I thought that was a strange question. I’d looked at many manuscripts during my research, not just at Hebrew Matthew, in other fields. I said, “Why did you ask that?” You know, being a Jew, I have to answer a question with a question. “Why are you asking this question?” I said. He said, “Because you’re the first one to check out that manuscript from the library.” And I’m thinking, “This is amazing. This manuscript’s been available to the scholarly world for 10 years, and no one’s looked at it. It’s fallen through the cracks.”

And I realized, this is a field that needs to be researched. I mean, I talked yesterday about that one letter in Matthew chapter 23 in the Hebrew Matthew that completely changes the message. I mean, it’s one letter, a single stroke of a pen, the letter Vav, that changes the message, and here are over a dozen manuscripts that are not being studied.

And at that point, that was when I contacted Keith, and I said, “Keith…” I’d actually talked to him when I did the research on Matthew 23, I haven’t made that commonly known. But I had consulted him on that, and I decided, “There’s so much information here that needs to be researched, would you come and would you research this with me?” That was on this Hebrew Matthew.

One of the things on Hebrew Matthew that’s really exciting is why George Howard thought that it wasn’t a translation from Latin or Greek, because if you ask most New Testament scholars, 99 percent of New Testament scholars, “What is the original language of the New Testament?” They’ll tell you, “Greek.” And that’s what Howard thought, as well. He was a professor, a part of the whole system, and when he’s reading this Hebrew Matthew, there’s something in the text that convinces him that it’s actually something written in Hebrew.

First of all, let me tell you a little bit about the background of Hebrew Matthew. Here’s a quote from Jerome. Jerome was one of the most famous Church Fathers. He’s the one who translated the Bible from Hebrew into Latin. That became known as the Latin Vulgate. That was the Bible used by the Catholic Church, the Western Church, for over 1,000 years.

And he says as follows, and he’s writing in the year 392. He says, “Matthew composed a Gospel of Christ first published in Judea, in Hebrew.” He’s telling us matter of factly, it was written in Hebrew. And then he says, “The Hebrew itself has been preserved until the present day in the library at Caesarea.” Now, Caesarea is a city on the coast of Israel, and if he says that the Gospel of Matthew is in the library at Caesarea, he knows what he’s talking about.

He goes on and he says, “I have also had the opportunity of having the volume described to me by the Nazarenes of Beroea, who use it.” Now, who were these Nazarenes? Nazarenes were the original descendants of the Jewish followers of Yeshua. They weren’t called Christians. They weren’t called Christians until the Gentiles in Antioch were following him as Christ, in Greek, and they were called Christianos. But the original followers, who were Jews, were called “Notzrim” or Nazarenes.” And the Gospel that they would naturally use was this Gospel in Hebrew. It makes sense, they’re Hebrew speakers, and if you look at ancient education, you might have a Jew who spoke Hebrew, Greek, and Aramaic. That was very common, to speak all three languages.

Keith mentioned how if you speak three languages, you’re trilingual. When we traveled to South Africa, what we found out is that you’d think the more educated a person is, the more languages he speaks. It turns out, the less educated and the lower economic class someone is, the poorer they are, the more languages they speak. Now, why is that? Because when they come and they have to work for the rich people, they can’t speak their own language, they have to speak the rich person’s language. So, we met people in some of these townships in South Africa who spoke four, five, or six languages. And then, we’d go to the people in these beautiful palaces, and they would speak the one language, the one language that they grew up speaking.

And that’s what things were like, 2,000 years ago in Judea. You had people who spoke all three languages - Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek - but they didn’t read all three languages. The average Jew only read one language, and that was Hebrew, because that was the language of discourse. That was the language of the synagogue. They had to learn that to be able to pray in the synagogue, to participate, to read from the Scriptures in the synagogues.

So, these Nazarenes who were reading this Gospel of Matthew, it had to be in Hebrew as the original language. When it was taken to the Gentiles, then they may have translated it into other languages.

This Hebrew Matthew disappears for about 1,000 years after the time of Jerome, and it reappears in Spain in the writings of a rabbi named Shem Tov Ibn Shaprut. And in the year 1380, he publishes this Hebrew version of the Gospel of Matthew. Now, where did he get it from? Howard, the professor who discovered it in 1987, assumed that Shem Tov translated it from Latin or Greek. The internal evidence shows that it was actually an original Hebrew document.

And this is actually a page from the Gospel of Matthew from the British Library manuscript of the Gospel of Matthew in Hebrew. And on this page, you can see how Howard knew that the Gospel of Matthew was not only written in Hebrew, but that this was a Hebrew original document. And here, if you read it in Hebrew, I’ll read to you what it says. This is actually from chapter 1 of the Gospel of Matthew, verses 18 to 25, the scene in the Gospel, the birth scene. Particularly, the verse we’re going to look at is where the angel appears to Joseph and tells him what name to call the unborn child.

And here in the Hebrew, the angel says, “Veteled ben vetikra shemo Yeshua, ki Hu yoshia et ami mi’avonotam.” Now, do you all see how that proves that this is an original Hebrew Matthew? [laughter] Hey, and sometimes I’ll get people in the audience who’ll say, “Yes,” and that’s proof that they’re no longer paying attention, they’re now asleep.

All right, let me read you first the English translation of the Greek, and then we’ll look at the Hebrew. The English translation of the Greek in Matthew chapter 1 verse 21, the angel says to Joseph, “And she will bring forth a Son, and you shall call his name Jesus,” in Greek, “Yesus,” “for He will save His people from their sins.” Now, this is what we call a Hebrew word pun. This is one of the core characteristics of ancient Hebrew writing, connections between words, and especially, names and the reason for the names. And the fact that it says “for”, “for He will save His people from their sins,” “for” is a word of causation. It tells you, why will he be called “Yesus,” “Jesus?” “For,” because, “He will save His people from their sins.”

Now, when you read this in Greek, English, Aramaic, and in Latin and every ancient language - except Hebrew - you’re left wondering, what on earth does the name “Jesus,” “Yesus,” have to do with the statement, “He will save His people from their sins?” It’s a non-sequitur.

Now, let me give you an example of a Hebrew word pun, so you understand what I’m talking about. We’re told the first woman is called “Chavah”, say “Chavah...”

Audience: Chavah.

Nehemia: …and “Eve” in English. Why is she called that? Because she’s the mother of all that live. Say “live”.

Audience: Live.

Nehemia: Now, the Hebrew word for “live” is “chaya.” Say “chaya.

Audience: Chaya.

Nehemia: So, she’s called “Chavah” from the word “chai,” life, “chayah,” living. Now, how do we know the Bible wasn’t written in English, the original Bible? Because if it was written in English, what would she have been called, the first woman? Not Eve, because Eve has nothing to do with the word “live”. She probably would have been called something like “Livvy,” and that sounds ridiculous, but that’s how the Hebrew word puns work. You take a name and you find a word similar to that name, and you connect them. Well, “Yesus”, “Jesus”, has nothing to do with the statement, “He will save His people from their sins.” When you look at it in Hebrew, it makes perfect sense.

In Hebrew, the angel says, “And she will give birth to a son, and you shall call His name Yeshua.” Say “Yeshua”.

Audience: Yeshua.

Nehemia: “For He will save my people from their iniquities.” Now, Hebrew’s a very concise language, and the three English words, “He will save,” say “He will save...”

Audience: He will save.

Nehemia: …translates to one Hebrew word, “yoshia”. Say “yoshia”.

Audience: Yoshia.

Nehemia: So, if you read it in Hebrew, it’s obvious why he’s called Yeshua. It jumps off the page, and it makes perfect sense. And you really can come to no other conclusion than that this was written in Hebrew. I mean, it’s ridiculous. If the angel were speaking Aramaic, then this just didn’t make any sense, because the words don’t connect. It doesn’t make sense in Latin, it doesn’t make sense in Greek, or any of the other languages of the ancient world. It only makes sense in Hebrew.

Now, I’m a very skeptical person, and as I was studying this, I wasn’t studying this as what you would call a “believer”. I’m a believer of my faith, I’m a Jew, but I’m not what Christians or Messianics would call a believer, meaning in Christianity and what the Messianics believe. And so I’m studying this as a skeptic. And we called the book, A Prayer to Our Father, really it began as a prayer to Keith’s Father. That’s how I looked at it. I’ll explain more about that. It was his prayer, it wasn’t my prayer to begin with. And it was like with Michael, “This is research, very interesting. It’s intellectual exercise.” It wasn’t anything that really changed me, at first.

And as I was studying this, as a skeptic, I’m saying, “How do we know that this Hebrew document wasn’t written in Hebrew?” No question it was written in Hebrew. I mean, you’ve got to have faith in little green men to believe this wasn’t written in Hebrew. Thank you, Donovan. It clearly was written in Hebrew.

This would be the greatest conspiracy of all time, or the greatest coincidence of all time if this wasn’t written in Hebrew. Can we just show that for a second there? I mean, look at that. How can that not… For he will call his name Yeshua,” again say “Yeshua”.

Audience: Yeshua.

Nehemia: “For He will save His people from their iniquities.” So, why was he called “Yeshua?” Because…

Audience: He will save His people.

Nehemia: You work with Keith, you won’t work with me? Because yoshia, why will he be called “Yeshua?” Because…

Audience: He will save.

Nehemia: That’s what the angel’s saying. It had to be written in Hebrew. But again, as a skeptic, my question was - maybe it was written in Hebrew, translated into Greek, and then maybe translated back into Hebrew? How do I know that didn’t happen? Because after all, Shem Tov Ibn Shaprut lived in 1380, over 1,000 years after the last reference to the Gospel of Matthew in Hebrew by Jerome, in 392, 1,300 years after the book was written. So, how do I know that this is a Hebrew original document?

And you can really see it very clearly from other examples. One example could be a coincidence. Here’s another example, Hebrew Matthew chapter 18 verses 23 to 35. We have the parable of the debt. It’s a parable that talks about a man who owes a debt to a king, and he can’t afford to pay the debt, so he goes and he puts the squeeze on his servant, who owes him money. In the meantime, the king forgives the man, but the man doesn’t forgive his servant. And the moral of the parable is, if you want your heavenly King to forgive you, you have to forgive those on earth who have wronged you. It’s a very powerful message of forgiveness.

Now, the central theme of the parable is the concept of paying. The Hebrew word for pay is “shalem”. Say “shalem”.

Audience: Shalem.

Nehemia: Five times it says, “Pay, pay, pay, pay, pay.” It proves Yeshua was Jewish. Five times it says this. [laughter] I’m Jewish, I’m allowed to make that joke. Five times it says, “to pay”. Shalem is the word. Say “shalem” five times. No, don’t do that. Shalem, shalem, shalem, shalem, shalem. Five times the central theme of the parable.

Now, what Hebrew word puns often do is, they use the same word with different meanings. And here, he does that in verse 35 in the moral of the parable. And I’m going to ask somebody… who here has a King James version of the Bible, who has a strong voice? Who has a King James Bible? New King James is fine. Okay, I’m going to ask you, turn to Matthew 18:35. I’m going to ask you to stand up in a minute, and read it. If we can get her on camera and on mic, that would be great.

So what he says in the Hebrew is, “So shall my Father in Heaven do if shall not forgive each man his brother with a complete heart.” And the Hebrew word for complete is “shalem”. Say “shalem”.

Audience: Shalem.

Nehemia: Now, shalem was the central theme of the parable. Five times, it said “shalem”, “to pay”. And then, the central theme of the parable, shalem, is reused in the moral of the parable where it says, “So shall my Father in Heaven do if shall not forgive each man his brother with a complete heart.”

Now, as a skeptic, I asked the question, how do I know it wasn’t written in Hebrew, translated into Greek, and then translated back into Hebrew? And what I’m going to look for in the New King James, which is a translation from the Greek is the word “shalem”, or in this case the English translation of the word “complete”. So, please read it, ma’am, and read it slowly. And listen as she’s reading, for the word “complete”, or something similar to complete. Yes, verse 35.

Woman: Matthew 18:35. “So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also unto you if you, from your hearts, forgive not everyone his brother their trespass.”

Nehemia: Did you all hear that? What was the word included “to complete?” It wasn’t there. It says, “from your hearts”. It doesn’t say anything about a “complete heart”, or a “half heart”, or a “three-quarters of a heart”. It just says, “from your hearts”. And that’s a Hebraic expression, “a complete heart”.

Now, that key word, the key word that ties everything - you can sit down, thank you - the key word that ties everything in together is missing in the Greek. 5,000 Greek manuscripts, and none of them have this, and this can’t be a coincidence. This is the central theme of the parable, and what this proves is, we’re not dealing here with a translation from Greek. We’re dealing here with an original Hebrew document that has these connections in Hebrew that are lost in other languages.

Now, what I’m not saying is that every single letter and every single word in this Hebrew version of Matthew is what Matthew wrote in the first century. And that might sound like a little subtle technical difficulty, like what are you talking about? If this is the Hebrew original, then doesn’t that mean every letter is the original of what Matthew wrote in Hebrew? But think about it - Matthew wrote it 1,400 or 1,300 years before Matthew - Shem Tov copied it. That was copied, and copied, and copied many generations, and things may have changed over the generations, just like they did in the Greek. There are over 5,000 manuscripts of the Greek and no two are identical. The Greek is still the primary text, though. Anybody who comes to you and says, “Throw away your Greek text, you don’t need the Greek,” that’s not part of serious scholarship. The Greek is the primary text of the New Testament.

What the Hebrew does is it serves as another witness to that original message that Yeshua taught, and sometimes, things that are lost in the Greek are still preserved in this Hebrew, because although it was transmitted over a long period of time, it’s in the original language and wasn’t translated.

So, you know, I think the more witnesses you have, the better, especially if you’re dealing here with a witness that didn’t need to be translated. If we have 10 witnesses to a car accident and 9 of them speak Spanish and I have to hear what they say through a translator, and the 10th one is speaking to me in English, and that’s the language I speak, or in Hebrew, I think I’m probably better off taking all the evidence I can, and putting the picture together and saying, “What did this man say, 2,000 years ago?”

This is my book The Hebrew Yeshua vs. the Greek Jesus, I go into more detail there about his whole issue of the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew, and I bring there an example, this is also in the video, Raiders of the Lost Book. I bring there an example where I think you’d have to have profound faith in coincidences to believe that this Hebrew version doesn’t have something to contribute to the study of what Yeshua taught.

Today, I want to talk to you a little bit about the prayer itself, about what Christians commonly refer to as the Lord’s Prayer. And this is a prayer that appears in Matthew chapter 6 verses 9 to 13, and what Keith and I decided to do was to look at this prayer in Hebrew and compare it systematically to the Greek. We didn’t throw away the Greek text, we used that as a basis of reference, and in most of the Prayer, we found the Greek and Hebrew were identical. What we did find sometimes is the Greek was ambiguous - it could be interpreted in two different ways, whereas the Hebrew was unambiguous. It cleared up all doubts and all questions. And hopefully, if we have time, we’ll look at an example of that.

So, the Lord’s Prayer opens with the words - this, by the way, is a page from that manuscript in St. Petersburg, the one that I first went to look at, or to check out, anyway, after 10 years. Here, in the St. Petersburg manuscript, we see the opening words of the Lord’s Prayer, “Avinu shebashamayim.” Repeat after me, “Avinu…”

Audience: Avinu.

Nehemia: Shebashamayim.

Audience: Shebashamayim.

Nehemia: Now, I’m going to have you sing it. No, just kidding. [laughter] All right. Now, these words translate as, “Our Father in Heaven,” or, “Our Father who art in Heaven,” if you want to get all poetical in English. And here, really the Hebrew and Greek are identical. There’s no fundamental difference. And you might think, “Well, there’s nothing to really say about this.” But for me, this was, I think, one of the most profound passages that changed me, because as I said, I started out looking at this as Keith’s prayer to his Father. But for me to pray to God as Father was an alien concept. I thought, “You know, okay. I’ve seen that Yeshua, Jesus…” or Yeshua as he was known, 2,000 years ago, “was teaching this message which seems to be a Jewish message.” And all of a sudden, I get to this prayer, and he’s teaching them to pray as Christians pray.

And the reason I thought that is that obviously Christians have the concept of Father and Son, when they think of God, and for me as Jew, that’s a concept that’s completely incomprehensible. I mean, I don’t even understand what that means, as a Jew. And so to think of God as Father was alien to me. And I wasn’t the only one who said that. As Keith and I were doing this research, we looked at all kinds of scholarly writings, and commentaries, and studies, and articles in these prestigious journals, and we had these great scholars, experts in Greek and all the ancient languages saying, “Hey, wait a minute. When Jesus taught the Jewish multitudes to pray to God as Father, it shook the very foundations of the Jewish world. It was a scandal. People were upset.”

What we decided to do is not just take my gut feeling and what these scholars were saying, but to actually look in the sources, because my approach has always been, “Let’s see what the ancient sources say.” I was approaching this as a textual scholar, and I said to Keith, “Look, you approach this as a believer in Christianity, I’m approaching this as a textual scholar, let’s meet in the middle and see what we can find.” And I think what we found, coming from those two different perspectives, has been amazing.

And here, I think, is a great example of it. So, God as Father, we wanted to know, what did the ancient Jews who heard Jesus, Yeshua, preach this message, what did they understand when he said that? Was that a scandal, did that upset people? And how do we answer that question? Well, you have to look at the ancient literature that they read and that they wrote.

So, we looked at the Dead Sea Scrolls, and we looked at the Apocrypha, and the Pseudepigrapha, and all the ancient Jewish literature from that period, and one of the main things we looked at, though, was the Tanakh, the Old Testament. And why did we look at that? Because many of these Jews who were coming to hear Yeshua preach, they were what we call in Hebrew, “am ha’aretz”. Say “am…

Audience: Am

Nehemia: Ha’aretz.

Audience: Ha’aretz.

Nehemia: Now, in your English Bibles, that’s translated as “multitudes”. It literally means, “people of the land”. These were simple people, shepherds, and farmers, and fishermen. Think about Peter, who was a fisherman before he came and joined Yeshua. These were simple people. They didn’t have sophisticated, complicated ways of arguing themselves out of what Scripture actually said. They read what Scripture said, and they said, “Let’s do it. It’s very clear what it means. Let’s just live by it.”

And one of the things we’re told by the ancient rabbis is they actually have a technical discussion about the technical definition of what in Hebrew is usually understood to mean “ignoramus”. Say “ignoramus”.

Audience: Ignoramus.

Nehemia: And in Hebrew, the phrase for ignoramus is “am ha’aretz”. Say “am ha’aretz”.

Audience: Am ha’aretz.

Nehemia: What I explained literally, it means, “people of the land”, when it talks about the multitudes. The rabbis heard the word “multitude” and they said, “Oh, ignoramus.” And the rabbinical definition of a Jewish ignoramus is someone who has read Scripture and read it a second time but has not served under the rabbis as a student, as a disciple. These were people who came every week to the synagogue, heard the Scriptures read, and that was their main frame of reference for everything.

Now, let’s jump forward 2,000 years in the United States of America, the 21st century. What is our main cultural frame of reference for most Americans? TV. And after TV, what is it? Hollywood movies. And now it’s becoming increasingly the Internet. If you want to understand what an ancient Jew, an Israelite understood, you’ve got to look in the Tanakh. That’s their main cultural frame of reference. And especially, those Jewish am ha’aretz, those multitudes, the masses who came to hear Yeshua preach, that was their frame of reference.

So, we decided to look in the Old Testament, in the Tanakh, to see what it says there about God being a Father. And it didn’t take all but 30 seconds to find out I was wrong, and that those great scholars were wrong, who said it shook the very foundations of the Jewish world. And I was thrilled to find out I was wrong, because it meant I had found truth.

And let’s look at this one verse that blew me out of the water completely, when I saw it. And I’d read this before, and I was like, “Why didn’t this hit me before? It was right in front of me.” Here, Isaiah is speaking to the people and he’s functioning in his role as the biblical prophet. What’s the primary role of an Old Testament biblical prophet?

We think today of the prophet of somebody who tells the future, but if you look in the Tanakh, the primary function of the biblical prophets is to call on the people to repent, return to the word of God, repent. And then the second role is to tell the future. What are they telling the future about? “Here’s what happens when you don’t repent. There are going to be consequences. And then, once you do finally repent, when God slaps you so hard you say, ‘Okay, Father. Take me back, I repent,’” then they give the prophesy, the future of what they call in Hebrew, “nechama,” a word that’s actually the derivation of my name, which means the “reconciliation”, the “consolation”, the “comfort”. If you look at Isaiah, for example, 40 and on, that’s the nechama, the consolation, the comfort.

And those are the main two roles of the biblical prophet that we’re familiar with, but the primary, the most important role of the biblical prophet, is what I’m calling here the third one, but it actually appears first in the Old Testament, in the Book of Genesis chapter 14. What is that, the role of the prophet? It’s to pray, as an intercessor. The first time it appears is Genesis 14, when God says to Avimelech, who’s the Philistine king who has been stricken with this plague, He says, “Go to Abraham and ask him to pray for you, for he is a prophet.” And God listens to the prayers and the intercession of the prophet.

There’s actually a passage in Jeremiah where God says to Jeremiah, “Don’t pray for this people, because if you pray for them, I’ll have to listen to you, and they don’t deserve it.” So God commanded him not to pray for the people to intercede in that particular case. Here, in this verse in Isaiah 63 verses 15 to 16, Isaiah’s functioning in his role as the biblical prophet.

And he says there, praying to God, “Look down from heaven, for You are our Father.” He calls God “our Father”. Say “our Father”.

Audience: Our Father.

Nehemia: In Hebrew, Avinu. Say “Avinu”.

Audience: Avinu.

Nehemia: He says, “For You are our Father, though Abraham does not know us, and Israel does not acknowledge us.” Who are Abraham and Israel? They are the literal forefathers of the people of Israel. Israel is Jacob after he wrestled with the angel. “The literal forefathers,” he’s saying, “can’t help us. They’re dead right now. The only one who can help us, the only one who can redeem, You, O Lord, are our Father, our redeemer. You’re the only one who can save us in this situation. We need You.” Isaiah was interceding here, asking for God’s redemption. “Abraham and Israel couldn’t do anything for us right now.”

Now here, he’s turning to God as our Father and he’s saying, “Look down from heaven,” just like what Yeshua taught, 2,000 years ago, when he preached to the Jewish multitudes. Now, this is a very solid biblical message. Yes.

Now, when I was looking at this, I’m like, “I’ve read this verse, I don’t know how many times.” Isaiah is one of my favorite books. But did it ever happen that you read a passage, and you read it over, and over, and over, and somehow, it doesn’t hit you what it means? It’s like it’s right in front of you, and how do you not see it?

And when we started to look for this, we realized, “This is everywhere.” It started popping up everywhere, all over the Bible. And one of my favorite passages was Jeremiah 3:19, because there, God is speaking to Israel, and He says to Israel, He says, “I said you shall call Me ‘My Father,’ and not turn away from Me.” Following God, living according to God’s word, is part and parcel intertwined with the idea of calling Him “Father”. And I said to myself, “How did I not see this?” He literally says, “call Me ‘My Father.’” In the second place, He also says that.

Now, when I was studying this with Keith, he asked a great question. Keith asks good questions. And as a Jew, I often answer those questions with other questions. But in this particular case, he asked a question. He said, “Nehemia, okay, God’s speaking to you as Israel.” And one of the things I love about Keith is a lot of Christians who are exploring and rediscovering the Hebrew roots of Christianity, what they’ll do is, they’ll shake the family tree until a Jew falls out. [laughter]

Have you met people like that? “Yes, 30 generations ago, my father was a Jew somewhere.” Now, what Keith has done is, he shook the family tree and nothing fell out, and to the best of his knowledge, he’s not Jewish. Maybe he is, I don’t know. He says to me, “Okay, as a Gentile, how can I approach God from an Old Testament perspective? Can I call him ‘Father’? And if not, then maybe that’s something new that Yeshua was teaching that did shake the foundations of the Jewish world.” When they heard Yeshua stand up there and say, “Everyone, pray to God as our Father,” maybe they said, “Oh, no. That’s only for the Jews.” Is that possible? I suppose it is.

Well, we didn’t want opinion, I don’t like opinions. I want to see Scriptural fact. That’s been my approach with everything. We said, “Let’s leave our opinions out of it, and look in the Tanakh, in the Old Testament, and see what it says about that.” And we came across this verse and others like it, Malachi chapter 2 verse 10. It says, “Have we not all one Father?” Say “Father”.

Audience: Father.

Nehemia: “Did not one God create us?” Here, he’s telling us that all mankind, all of His creations, every human being, that He is the Father of us all. We are all His children. Now, this is not an opinion, it’s a Scriptural fact. So when Yeshua taught the Jews to pray as Father, this wasn’t a scandal that shook the foundations of the Jewish world. They heard this and they said, “He is our Father. We know this. This is a message we hear every week in the synagogue. We need to return to this message and repent.” One of the places we found God honored as Father was in Jewish names. For example, the name Aviezer, means “my Father helps”. Many ancient Hebrew names are short sentences. My name, Nehemia, means “Ya comforts”. Ya is the poetic name of our Father. “Aviezer”, “my Father helps”, “Avinadav”, “my Father gives freely”, “Avihud”, “my Father is glory”, “Avituv”, “my Father is good”, “Avishalom”, “my Father is peace”, “Avigail”, “my Father is joy”, We could go on, and on, and on. “Avishua”, “my Father saves”.

The Jews who came to hear Yeshua preach in the very names that they bore, they testified to God as our Father. And so when Yeshua taught that message, no one was shocked. No one tore their clothes and said “blasphemy!” They said, “God is our Father. We must return to Him.”

Now, when I realized this, it blew me away. I’m like, “This is amazing.” This is a prayer… think about this. This is what’s commonly in Christianity called The Lord’s Prayer, what’s called in Hebrew, the Avinu prayer. Say “Avinu”.

Audience: Avinu.

Nehemia: Avinu is the Hebrew word that means “our Father”. In Hebrew, you name things after the opening words. The Avinu prayer, the “our Father prayer”, is a prayer that any Christian, obviously, can pray. But if you think about it, any Jew can pray this prayer. When Yeshua taught that, nobody said, “Oh, no. We can’t pray this. This is a Christian prayer.” It made perfect sense to them.

I fully realized this almost two years ago, when I was doing a little teaching over in Seattle. My sister was in the audience, and like me, she was raised as an Orthodox Jew. But unlike me, she hasn’t studied Christianity, couldn’t tell you what the names of the four Gospels are, or the 12 Disciples. She’s a very educated woman, a professor at the University of Washington, but doesn’t know anything about Christianity. And I thought it would be interesting to put her on the spot and say, “Sharona, can you recite for us the Lord’s Prayer?” And I asked her to stand up in the middle of the presentation, and she’s able to do it. She says, “Our Father in Heaven, hallowed be Thy Name, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done.” And I thought, “Wow, I’ve proven my point, I can now go on.” And then, she did something she did throughout my whole childhood, she interrupted me. And she said, “Nehemia, I know another prayer.” And I thought, “Okay, I called on you. I asked you to stand up. What’s this other prayer?” And she begins to recite, “Hail Mary, full of grace, blessed art Thou amongst women, blessed is the fruit of Thy womb.” [laughter] And she said she knew this from this scene in the movie, The Godfather, where Frankie is on the boat on Lake Tahoe, and he’s saying these Hail Marys. She’s a big fan of The Godfather series, from number two, I believe. And that’s where she knew that prayer from.

But it made me realize, there are two prayers that the average American with their cultural frame of reference - movies - they know these two prayers. But think how different those two prayers are. The one prayer any Jew could pray. The other, and I’m not putting down Catholics. Many Catholics may find this profound in their faith, that’s between them and God. As a textual scholar, I don’t feel that’s my faith. Maybe Keith will come up and do that, I don’t know. [laughing] I threw him under the bus. But as a Jew, I want to present people with the facts, and they need to work it out for themselves, in fear and trembling, with prayer and study.

But I, as a Jew, could never have anything to do with the Hail Mary prayer, it’s praying to Mary. And I don’t know about you guys, I couldn’t have anything to do with that. But a prayer to our Father, if you think about it, is a perfectly good Jewish prayer. And I’m going to say something controversial. Not only could a Jew pray this prayer, I believe a Muslim could pray this prayer, and a Buddhist, and a Hindu could pray this prayer. And any human being in our humanity could turn to God as our Father in Heaven and pray to Him, and praise His name, and bless His kingdom. I mean, what a powerful message this is. And at the end of this I realized, this isn’t just Keith’s prayer, just a prayer to his Father. This is a prayer to my God as Father, to our Father. And that’s why we decided to call the book, A Prayer to Our Father. It was really the culmination of the process. In the beginning, it wasn’t called… Can I tell them what the book was originally called?

Audience: Yeah.

Nehemia: Okay, I won’t tell them. [laughter] So generally, when I say, “Can I tell them?” I do it anyway, as Keith knows very well. But originally, it was called… I don’t remember the exact name, but something like, Yeshua’s Prayer, or something like that, or The Hebrew Prayer of Jesus, something like that, because it wasn’t my prayer. That was Jesus’ prayer, nothing to do with me. And I realized, this is a Jewish prayer. This is a prayer that has swept the world, that people know more of this prayer than probably any prayer in the world, if you think about it. If you ask people, it’s been translated into every language, it’s universally known.

I want to look quickly at another part of the prayer. This is the part of the prayer where in the English it says, “Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.” And that’s how it reads in Matthew. But in Luke, this is a famous contradiction between Matthew and Luke in the Greek. Instead of “debts” it says, “sins, forgive us our sins.” And which one is it? Maybe you’d say, “Well, it’s not important. It’s the same sort of thing.” But I don’t know, if you guys believe that Yeshua is the Messiah, then I would think every word he said is important, and it should make a difference. You know, what did he say, “Forgive us our debts” or “Forgive us our sins?” And some people, somewhere next Sunday is going to be sitting in a pew, maybe even tomorrow, and he’s going to be looking at this and saying, “Wait a minute. These guys can’t even get their story straight.”

Now, it turns out that both debts and sins are two different translations of the same Hebrew word, and that Hebrew word is the Hebrew word, “mekhol”. Say “mekhol”.

Audience: Mekhol.

Nehemia: Mekhol is a word that literally means, “to cancel a debt”. And the image of mekhol is when you take out a loan from a bank or from a moneylender, you write out a certificate of debt that proves that you owe the money. And when the debt is completely paid off, you take water and you pour it on the debt and you erase it. Now, why water? Because they didn’t have those erasers for the #2 pencil. The way to erase in ancient times is, you would blot something out. You’d take water that dissolves the ink. And so they would erase the debt, that’s what mekhol means. It comes from the Hebrew word, “makha”. “to erase”. That’s canceling a debt by erasing the certificate of debt.

Now, by extension in Hebrew, the same word that means “to cancel a debt”, this technical monetary term, also means “to forgive”. The problem is that in Greek, the two words have nothing to do with each other. The concept of canceling a debt and forgiving are two completely different concepts.

Now, imagine if you’re a Greek speaker in Athens, or Ephesus, and this Jewish Apostle comes to you from across the sea, from the backwater of the Roman Empire, from Judea. Really, it was a backwater back then. It’s like coming from some little town in the middle of Texas somewhere, you know, Tyler, or someplace like that, right? Is that even on the map? I don’t know, is anybody here from Tyler? Is that not in the middle of nowhere, am I wrong about that? That’s what it’s like for someone to come to you from Judea, and they’d say, “Our Messiah has appeared to us, and He taught us how to pray. And in this prayer, He taught us to pray to our Father in Heaven and ask Him to forgive us our debts.”

Now, you as a Greek speaker hear this, and you’re not Jewish, you’re a Greek pagan. You hear this message, and you’re completely confused. “Forgive us our debts?” You say, “Why does He teach us to forgive us our debts? Why are these Jews always talking about money?” Again, I’m allowed to make that joke, and you have permission to laugh. Okay, you too.

But really, it would confuse you. It wouldn’t make any sense. It would be like today if you said, “O Lord, forgive me my mortgage,” which I know many people in this economy want to pray, but if you think about it, it doesn’t really make sense. I don’t owe God a mortgage. I haven’t taken out a mortgage on my soul. Why would I ask in Greek, “God, forgive me my debts?” I don’t owe Him money. I’ve done other sins, violated His covenant in other ways.

And that was the problem that Matthew and Luke faced. When Matthew decided to translate it into the Greek literally, or whoever translated it from the Hebrew, he translated “mekhol” as “forgive us our debts”. And in a way, he honored the Hebrew, but did a disservice to the Greek speaker.

Luke, on the other hand, said, “I can’t translate this as ‘forgive us our debts’, no one will know what I was talking about. It literally would be like saying, ‘forgive us our mortgage’.” And so he translated it based on the Greek idiom, “Forgive us our sins.” And so it’s not that Matthew and Luke contradict each other. It’s that in the Greek, they’re two different translation solutions to the same Hebrew problem. And that’s one of the problems in any translation, even translating modern documents. There’s an old saying, “The translator is a traitor.” And what that means is, you could either translate literally and take the flavor of the original but do a disservice to the target language, or translate based on the target language, but then lose some of the beauty of the original.

And that’s the problem you have when you read any translation. A lot of people ask me, “What translation do you read?” And I say, “In the Tanakh I read it in the original Hebrew.” And the reason I do that is, every translation is someone’s interpretation. No translation is perfect.

All right, okay. I’m going to jump through, we’re running out of time, yes. Okay, let’s go through this. Here, I’ve got to talk about this, really quickly. All right.

One of the things I’ve seen, traveling around and speaking in churches, and Messianic congregations, and Keith and I have even spoken in Jewish synagogues. I don’t mean Messianic synagogues, I mean, no offense - real Jewish synagogues. And we’ve been traveling all over, and we actually were at something called the Jewish Book Council. It’s like speed-dating for Jewish authors, or authors on Jewish subjects. We had two minutes to present our topic, and I said, “Two minutes. That means, I only have 60 seconds, and it takes me usually, 45 minutes to tell my name. What are we talking about?” And it was a challenge. Well, we eventually got invited to speak at these Jewish community centers and synagogues all over the United States. And one of the things I’ve seen, particularly in the churches and the Messianic congregations though, is what I call “the spirit of Marcionism”. Does anybody know who Marcion was? He was what’s known today as an early Christian heretic. The Catholic Church called him a heretic. That, in itself, doesn’t impress me. [laughter]

But the thing that he taught was that the God of the Old Testament was distinct from the God of the New Testament. He said, “The God of the Old Testament was a God of vengeance, whereas the God of the New Testament is a God of forgiveness.” He said, “The God of the Old Testament was a God of hate, and the God of the New Testament was the God of love.” And in his Bible, there was no Old Testament. There was only a New Testament, and he only had 10 books in his New Testament. And I’m not saying anybody is saying exactly that, but I hear that a lot of times, like, “Oh, you as a Jew, there’s no forgiveness in your Bible. And your God is very vengeful.” “Really? I think my God and your God are the same God. And He doesn’t change, according to the Book of Malachi, in your Bible as well. Remember, that wasn’t in Marcion’s Bible, but it is in your Bible.”

And one of the things I find, you know, when Yeshua taught this message, “forgive us our debt as we forgive our debtors,” or literally in Hebrew, you could translate it as, “forgive us the debt of our sins as we forgive the debt of those who sin against us.” And this is a message of forgiveness. It’s a powerful message of reconciliation and forgiveness. And the question is, is that really a message that has a basis? Like, when the Jews heard that on the hillside when Yeshua was preaching this, was that a scandal? And if you look in the Tanakh - again, the main cultural reference for these ancient Jews - then you see that God, very clearly, is about forgiveness.

There’s a verse in Exodus 34 verses 6 to 7. I argue this is one of the most important passages in the entire Bible. And the reason it’s one of the most important passages is here, Moses, in Exodus 34 says to God, “Show me what You’re like. Reveal Yourself to me.” And God starts off by proclaiming His Name. He says, “Yehovah, Yehovah.” He proclaims His name twice, and then He says, “A God compassionate and gracious, slow to anger.” So, what does He do when he reveals Himself? He says, “You can’t see My physical form, My face, but this is what I’m like.” He says, “Yehovah, Yehovah, a God compassionate and gracious, slow to anger. Abounding in kindness and faithfulness, extending kindness to the thousandth generation, forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin.” This is one of God’s core characteristics in the Hebrew Bible. He’s not a God of vengeance that doesn’t forgive. If there’s repentance, He will forgive.

And what really blew me away when we were researching this is this verse, Psalm 99 verse 8, where God is called “El nose.” Say “El nose”.

Audience: El nose.

Nehemia: El nose is translated in Psalm 99:8 as a “forgiving God”, but the literal meaning here is so powerful. Remember, if you translate literally, you do a disservice to the target language. You translate here based on the idiom, then you lose the flavor of the original Hebrew. The Hebrew word “nose” comes from the word “masah” which is a burden being carried on the shoulders. And “El nose” means, “He is a God who carries the burden of sin on His shoulders.” This is in the Old Testament, and they translate it correctly when they say, “a forgiving God”. But for Him to forgive means He’s got to carry that burden of sin on His shoulders. That’s a powerful message in the Tanakh, in the Old Testament.

This is a picture of my dog, Georgia. Say “Georgia”.

Audience: Georgia.

Nehemia: I can’t hear you. You’re not going to work with me? Georgia.

Audience: Georgia.

Nehemia: Okay. And Georgia here is looking up to me after she probably did something, she got into the food, or the garbage, or something that she wasn’t supposed to do. And she’s saying, “I’m so cute and pretty. Please forgive me,” looking to me as her father. And one of the things I’ve found is that our Heavenly Father, when we look up to Him like that and we say, “I’m so cute and pretty.” Maybe not the pretty part. “Please Lord, forgive me.” And He does, He forgives us. He sees a face like this, Georgia. Say “Georgia”.

Audience: Georgia.

Nehemia: And He says, “How can I not forgive this face?” And I want to end with… Do I have a little bit more time? I want to end by sharing a testimony. And I know everyone’s looking forward to hearing exactly what happened in Smithfield. That will be tomorrow. I’m going to share a different testimony that gives you the background of what happened in Smithfield. And this is a testimony that I think maybe I’ve once publicly shared this. It’s difficult for me to share. Maybe I won’t do it.

Audience: No. Share it.

Nehemia: Well, so this book came out two years ago, A Prayer to Our Father. And about three years ago, I met this woman and I fell madly in love with her. And I’d actually been married before, and went through a painful divorce, and was divorced for a number of years. And I think, “I’m done with love. I don’t want to get married again. I don’t want to have anything to do with this.” It was too hurtful the first time. And I meet this woman, and I’m madly in love with her. And Keith would be calling me up. He’s like, “Where is he? He’s with her. What’s going on?” [laughing]

And after about a year - this was less than a week before I was about to go on a two-month speaking tour in the US, leaving Israel to the US for two months. A few days before I’m about to leave, she breaks some news to me that broke my heart. There was an issue of betrayal, I won’t go into what that was. But it really broke my heart, and I end up traveling around the US for two months. And I’m speaking at places and standing up in front of all kinds of congregations, and churches. And when you get up to do this, you’ve got to be excited about it. Am I excited?

Audience: Yes!

Nehemia: You’ve got to be excited about it, otherwise, people fall asleep. And you can’t fake that. That’s one of the things I learned from Michael, you can’t fake it. If you’re not genuine about it, people immediately pick up on that. And so I’d be traveling around, and my heart is broken. And I’d be sitting in my hotel room five minutes before I’m about to go on, in tears. And I say, “Okay, you’ve got to put that aside. You have a job to do. This is what God has called you to do, go up and do it, and suppress your real feelings, and go up, and it has to be genuine.” So, that’s a very difficult thing to do, to muster that courage and that strength. But somehow, God gave me that ability to do that.

But I’d go back to the hotel room, five minutes later I was in tears again. This went on for two months. I was a wreck. I was in this deep depression, and I remember traveling, driving through Colorado, through the mountains of Colorado, and these forests all over. And objectively, it’s the most beautiful thing - outside of Israel - that I’ve ever seen. [laughter] I’m biased about Israel, but it’s physically the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen. And all I feel is numb. I can’t enjoy it, because I’m just so sad. What I felt was the love of my life had betrayed me. I realized that what I needed was to do what Elijah did.

Elijah’s one of my favorite characters in the Tanakh. Elijah did something. He stood up on Mount Carmel and he was called out, and he faced the 400 prophets of Baal. And they were all saying, “We’re going to prove our power, and prove our might. Our god is stronger than you.” We all know what happened in the end. The prophets of Baal are defeated. And you would think that Elijah would be brought into the streets of Jezreel - the capital city of Israel at the time - in a wonderful procession as the great victor. But instead, he was hunted down like a dog. Jezebel, who was the queen, Izebel in Hebrew, she wanted to kill him, because he killed her prophets. She actually wasn’t an Israelite, she was a Sidonian princess, who was brought over by King Ahab. He married her, and she was zealous for the gods of the Canaanites, and she wanted to stamp out the worship of the true God in Israel.

Now, there had been idolatry going back to the time of Joshua. Let’s not lie and say, “Oh, the Israelites were so righteous.” If you read the Bible, there was idolatry the whole time, but it was idolatry - we’ll talk more about this tomorrow - it was idolatry mixed with truth. There was still a little bit of truth there. Jezebel said, “No more truth. We’re going to completely sweep this away. We’re going to annihilate this.” And Elijah had to flee for his life from Jezebel.

Now, I didn’t have half the problems of Elijah or half the faith, but I felt I was fleeing from a spirit of Jezebel. And when I got back to Israel, I called up a friend and I said, “We need to go to Mount Sinai.”

Now, some of you may or may not know that there’s this famous place in Egypt, which is the Sinai Peninsula, and there’s a place called St. Catherine’s or Mount Moses. That’s where most tourists go to as Mount Sinai. Where I wanted to go was this place in Saudi Arabia. Now, being an Israeli citizen, that’s kind of a bad idea. I’m kind of particular about my neck and my head, and I would prefer them not to be separated from my body. [laughter] And so I decided that I wasn’t going to go to Saudi Arabia. Instead, I went to a place called Nuweiba. Say “Nuweiba”.

Audience: Nuweiba.

Nehemia: Nuweiba is on the shore of the Red Sea, and it’s apparently, as far as I can tell, the place where the Israelites crossed over from bondage into freedom. And here is actually a picture of Nuweiba from sitting on the beach, and I actually sat on this beach for days with a friend of mine named Adam, from California. Hi, Adam. We were sitting there for days on the beach, and I’m thinking, “Okay, this is somehow going to heal me.” And I can look across and over here, I know somewhere in those mountains, I don’t know exactly where, is the real Mount Sinai. And if only I could get there somehow, my heart could be healed. But I know God can heal me anywhere. And I’m sitting there, day in, and day out, and it’s so beautiful, i hear the water lapping up... I’m sitting here on this Bedouin couch, and the water’s lapping up here. That’s how amazing this place was. It’s beautiful. Sunsets you wouldn’t imagine.

And nothing’s happening. I still feel empty and dead. Finally, I say, “Okay, we can’t go to the real Mount Sinai. Let’s go to the fake one, [laughing] because God can heal me anywhere.” And so we actually, through a series of adventures, end up going to what’s called Mount Moses next to St. Catherine’s Monastery. We climb to the top, and it takes us three hours. And we do this in the middle of the night, because it’s too hot to do during the day. We get to the top and I’m sitting off to the side, and I’m praying to God and I’m saying, “Please take away this pain from me.” I don’t think I’ve ever prayed so hard in my life. And nothing. I’m still feeling the same pain I’ve been feeling for over two months now.

And it was if she had shoved her fist through my chest and pulled out my still beating heart, and it’s going “Du-du, du-du, du-du.” I’m dead inside, and I’m praying, I’m asking God to take away the pain, and nothing happens.

And then I go to the top of the mountain, after I’ve prayed, and it’s almost before sunrise. It’s a few minutes before sunrise, and it’s beautiful up there, but we’re jam-packed. I can barely move. What I really want to do is get over there, to the highest spot. There’s actually a mosque built there, and over here is a church. And I find myself between the Mosque and the Church. I’m in this no-man’s land, and I can’t even move, because there are so many pilgrims from all over the world who are there, and they’re singing, and they’re praying in different languages. And I’m just feeling, “God, please take this pain away from me.”

Then something happened to me, something that’s never happened to me before in my life. I felt this wave of emotion, it’s the only way I can describe it, and just started crying. I burst into tears, and it came in these waves. And I don’t know if it lasted 15 seconds or 15 minutes, it just came in waves, again and again. I was bawling in tears all over the place. And then, in my mind’s eye, I heard God say to me, “I’m going to take this pain off your shoulders and carry it for you.” And I felt His hand reach down from heaven and take away my pain.

[applause]

At that moment, it was like I completely changed. I’d been walking around and it was like there was this veil in front of my eyes for two months. And all of a sudden, it was lifted and actually, on my way up the mountain, I’d stubbed my foot in the dark and didn’t even feel it. And now, all of a sudden, my foot is aching, and I was like, “That’s the greatest pain I’ve ever felt, because I’m alive! And I feel again!”

At first, I didn’t share this with anybody, because you have to understand where I come from. I’m what’s called a “Litvak,” say “Litvak.”

Audience: Litvak.

Nehemia: I can’t hear you. Litvak.

Audience: Litvak.

Nehemia: Litvak are Jews who came from Lithuania, and if you ask the Litvaks, they’ll tell you, “We were the intellectual elite of European Jewry before the Holocaust.” No question about it, they were famous for their book learning and study, they wrote volumes and books, and there are entire libraries written by the Litvak Jews. One of the things of the Litvak Jews is, they looked down upon the am ha’aretz. Say “am ha’aretz”.

Audience: Am ha’aretz.

Nehemia: That’s the Jewish multitudes. They said, “Those Jewish multitudes, they have their dreams, and their visions, and their superstitions. We’ve got the books. We’ve got the truth. They’ve got that inspiration…” say “inspiration…”

Audience: Inspiration.

Nehemia: “…but we’ve got the information, and the information is better.” This is what my ancestors believed, and what I was raised with, and the way I lived most of my life. And when this happened, I said, “Wait a minute. That’s not supposed to happen to me. That’s what happens to the am ha’aretz. That’s what happens to the multitudes, the superstitious masses.”

But this was real. I couldn’t push this away. I felt again, after being in so much pain for so long. It was real, so there was no way I could ignore it. And I had to find a way to process this information. I said, “This doesn’t make sense. There’s a certain box that I’ve always had God in,” and I’m thinking, “God, what are You doing? Get back in Your box! You’ve gotten out of the box, and You’re doing these things and You’re giving me this inspiration. That’s not supposed to happen.”

And boy, we’re going to have a great time tomorrow, I get to share the rest of this story. But Keith hears about this story, and one of the things I love about Keith is, Keith hears Nehemia had this experience and he said, “I need to have the same experience. I need to go to the Mount Moses, just like Nehemia did.” Now, when does he decide to do this? He decides to do this, I believe it was just after the riots began to overthrow Mubarak, if you remember that, earlier this year. Keith says, “I’ve got to have the Nehemia experience. Tell me what I need to do.” And I said, “Well, you take this bus and you wait there for four hours until the Bedouin comes and picks you up. Good luck with that, Keith. I wish you success.”

Well, Keith arrives in Israel, this is back in February, and I decide, “I’m going to go with him.” And we go down to Eilat, cross over the border in Israel. We arrive in Nuweiba at this place, we’re sitting on the shore of the Red Sea, and then finally we get over to Mount Moses. We climb to the top and I’m thinking, “Okay, one time that happened, it was a fluke. God, I forgive You. You’ve repented by not doing this again. I forgive You for that spiritual experience, that mystical experience You gave me. Just don’t do it again.” I get up there and guess what God did?

Audience: He did it again.

Nehemia: He did it again! [applause] And this was more unexpected for me than the first time, because the first time it just completely caught me off guard. The second time, I knew this wasn’t going to happen, because the first time He tricked me. I wasn’t ready for it, now I’m ready. There’s no way this is going to happen. And I get to the top there, and I just started crying. And then, in my mind’s eye, I feel His arm on my shoulder, His hand on my shoulder, and Him say, “I still love you, My son.” And I say to Him, “Toda, Abba,” “Thank You, Father.”

I want to ask all of you to stand up and say a prayer with me, to my Abba, to my Father. Repeat after me. This is the prayer that Yeshua taught the Jewish multitudes 2,000 years ago, as preserved in this Hebrew version of the Gospel of Matthew. He taught them to pray to our Father. “Avinu.” Repeat after me, “Avinu.

Audience: Avinu.

Nehemia: Shebashamayim

Audience: Shebashamayim.

Nehemia: Which means “our Father in Heaven.” Yitkadesh.

Audience: Yitkadesh.

Nehemia: Shimkha.

Audience: Shimkha.

Nehemia: May Your Name be sanctified, “vayitbarekh.”

Audience: Vayitbarekh.

Nehemia: Malkhutkha.

Audience: Malkhutkha.

Nehemia: And may Your kingdom be blessed. “Retzonkha yihiyeh asui bashamayaim u’va’aretz.” “Your will shall be done in heaven and on earth.” “Retzonkha.

Audience: Retzonkha.

Nehemia: Yihiyeh.

Audience: Yihiyeh.

Nehemia: Asui

Audience: Asui.

Nehemia: Bashamayim.

Audience: Bashamayim.

Nehemia: U’va’aretz.

Audience: U’va’aretz.

Nehemia: Vetiten.

Audience: Vetiten.

Nehemia: Lakhmeinu.

Audience: Lakhmeinu.

Nehemia: Temidit.

Audience: Temidit.

Nehemia: And give us our bread continually, daily, U’mekhol.

Audience: U’mekhol.

Nehemia: Lanu.

Audience: Lanu.

Nehemia: Khatoteinu.

Audience: Khatoteinu.

Nehemia: Ka’asher.

Audience: Ka’asher.

Nehemia: Anakhnu.

Audience: Anakhnu.

Nehemia: Mokhalim.

Audience: Mokhalim.

Nehemia: Lakhotim.

Audience: Lakhotim.

Nehemia: Lanu.

Audience: Lanu.

Nehemia: Which means, “And forgive us the debt of our sins as we forgive the debt of those who sin against us.” Ve’al.

Audience: Ve’al.

Nehemia: Tiviyenu.

Audience: Tiviyenu.

Nehemia: Lidei.

Audience: Lidei.

Nehemia: Nisayon.

Audience: Nisayon.

Nehemia: And bring us not into the hands of a test. Veshomreinu.

Audience: Veshomreinu.

Nehemia: Mikol.

Audience: Mikol.

Nehemia: Rah.

Audience: Rah.

Nehemia: And protect us from all evil, and let us all say, “amen”.

Audience: Amen.

Nehemia: Okay, please sit down. Before I hand it off and end, I want to share with you, that was the information. Now, I want to share with you some inspiration, which is, when Keith and I were traveling in South Africa, we were approached by this man who said he’d taken these words that we provided in the information in the book, A Prayer to Our Father, and put them to music. And we were so moved by this, we said, “Okay, where do we buy the CD?” He said, “I don’t have a CD. I just composed the music and played it. I never intended to play it again.” I said, “You must share this with the people!” And I’m going to now play for you the music video that he created, with our help, of this prayer, sung in Hebrew.

[Man Singing]

Avinu Shebashamayin, yitkadesh shimkha, veyitbarekh malkhutkha. Retzonkha yihiyeh asui bashamayaim u’va’aretz. Vetiten lakhmeinu temidit, u’mekhol lanu khatoteinu ka’asher anakhnu mokhalim lakhotim lanu. Ve’al teviyenu lidei nisayon veshomreinu mikol rah. Amen, amen, amen, amen. amen, amen, amen.”

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Discovering Common Ground with Keith Johnson (Open Door Series – Part 1)

Open Door Series Part 1 features Keith Johnson speaking on the topic of "Discovering Common Ground." Johnson relates the fascinating beginnings of his prophetic friendship with Nehemia Gordon. A dream led Johnson to Jerusalem in search of a Torah scroll and ultimately to an encounter with Gordon, who taught him to read the sacred text in its original language, history, and context. The duo’s unique partnership illustrates the “mixed multitude” that stands with Israel and the God of Israel as the people fulfill their destiny as a light to the nations.

Transcript

Discovering Common Ground with Keith Johnson (Open Door Series - Part 1)

You are listening to the Open Door Series with Nehemia Gordon. Thank you for supporting Nehemia Gordon's Makor Hebrew Foundation. Learn more at NehemiasWall.com.

Keith: It is such an honor to be here.

The reason I'm mostly honored is that the Creator of the Universe is once again calling us back to His mountain. And something amazing happened at His mountain. He called a mixed multitude of people out of a place of bondage to a place of freedom. What I love about this meeting here today is that I sense there are people here that know Egypt. There are people here who really understand Egypt. How many of you all would raise your hand and say, “I've been to Egypt”? The good news is this - we are coming out.

But here's the shocking thing about what the Creator of the Universe is choosing to do. He's deciding to use people, places and things, that those that are in the place of what's called "false power" do not know and do not understand. He's choosing to call people in ways that are not normal to the normal folks. He's doing something that I call unique. Now, the reason I know this is because it happened to me. And now, 10 years later, I'm laying in my bed this morning, and He's saying to me again, “Keith, I'm at it again. I'm orchestrating, I'm pulling together, I'm bringing together a beautiful symphony.”

And what He did for me is that He took me to a place called Colorado Springs. And in Colorado Springs, He took me up to a mountain called Pikes Peak. And as I was on the mountain called Pikes Peak, I said a prayer that radically changed my life.

The prayer was simply this: “Father, teach me to love what You love.” And I'd like to tell people that I should have stopped right there. But I added a second half. I said, “And teach me to hate what You hate.” And He raised His hands. And He began to do this. And He began to show me the things that He loved, and then He showed me the things that He hates.

A year later I find myself sleeping, again. And I had a dream, say "dream". And in this dream, there was a scroll flying over my head. And there was a lady's voice that said, “If you can tell me where the scroll will open up, you win a million dollars.” I quickly said, “Ezekiel chapter 1 verse 3.” The scroll came down, it opened up and immediately I woke up and heard this voice: “I have not changed My appointment with you to be in My city for Shavuot.” I don't even think I really understood what Shavuot was.

I woke up, went downstairs, told my wife Andrea. I said, “Andrea, I've been called to Jerusalem for the time of Shavuot in historic times, Pentecost, and I must go.” Now, something happened to me very deep. It was a deep passion that I had for that last year while I was trying to relearn Hebrew, because in seminary I had learned Greek and I'd learned Hebrew, but I was trying to relearn Hebrew, and as I was trying to relearn Hebrew, I had come across Psalm 119, and I said that's where I'm going to try to learn it in Hebrew. And I'm in Psalm 119 for a year. But there was something deeper. I had a passion to own my own Torah scroll. You all, I would go so far as to say this - I had been given vision to receive my own Torah scroll. Now, I've learned something, and I like to say it everywhere I go. Whenever… say “whenever”.

Crowd: Whenever.

Keith: Come on y'all, it's Shabbat. Say “whenever”.

Crowd: Whenever.

Keith: “The Creator.”

Crowd: The Creator.

Keith: Sing it. Say “whenever”.

Crowd: Whenever.

Keith: “The Creator.”

Crowd: The Creator.

Keith: “Gives vision.”

Crowd: Gives vision.

Keith: “He always.”

Crowd: He always.

Keith: “He always.”

Crowd: He always.

Keith: “Gives provision.”

Crowd: Gives provision.

Keith: So I have a vision to own a Torah scroll. The problem was, I didn't win the million dollars. I called all sorts of people and I told them, “Hey, I've been called, I want to own a Torah scroll. Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy.” And people told me over and over and over again, “You cannot have one. You are a gentile, even if you had won the money, no Jew is going to sell you a Torah scroll.” And so, basically, they convinced me, I thought, that I couldn't. But they didn't convince me to the point where I decided I was going to bring an empty suitcase with me to Jerusalem.

The problem I had was, I didn't know anyone in Jerusalem. All I knew is that the Father was calling me to be there, but somebody say “whenever”.

Crowd: Whenever.

Keith: With the vision came provision. I called my friend Hardy Nickerson. Hardy Nickerson used to play for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He knew some friends in Florida who knew some other people who knew some other people who knew Michael Rood. Now, Hardy said this to me, “Keith, if you're going to go to Jerusalem, do not go on a tour. Find someone that lives there that you can spend time with.” I said, “Okay.” Now, I said, “Hardy, would you like to come with me?” He said, “Well, I haven't been called to that.” [laughter]

It happened to be in around 2002, I believe it was, just after 2001. You guys know what happened in 2001, and everything that was happening in Israel. The State Department said, “Do not go to Israel, it's not good for you to go to Israel, it's not a good time for you to go to Israel.” The time that I'd had the dream was right around the time of Passover, there were major problems going on in Israel. They had the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, who had the hostages, and the list goes on and on and on.

But he did say to me, “Keith, I bless you as you go. Find someone that lives there.” He knew friends who knew my friend Reggie White. Reggie White and I have been very, very close friends. Reggie knew Michael Rood. And through the grapevine someone said, “I know what we’ve got to do. Keith’s kind of nuts, let's call Michael Rood. [laughter] Michael won't be afraid of what's happening here.” They called Michael over the phone and said, “Michael, there's a man that needs to come and visit you in your house.” Michael said, “No problem.”

And that was just about it. He invites me to come to his house. So I come with my empty suitcase. Michael doesn't ask me for anything. I come in, I meet him, I talk. He has food there, we're eating, we're fellowshipping, we're doing what we're doing. He says, “Whatever you feel like you need to do, you do.” So every day I would walk in the Old City of Jerusalem. One day I come across this man named Zaki. Say “Zaki”.

Crowd: Zaki.

Keith: Zaki called himself an Arab Christian. And I said, “Zaki, listen, I have a phone number of a man who supposedly owns Torah scrolls. The problem is, if I call the number, which I can't even figure out how to call it in Israel, the people don't speak English.” He says, “No problem.” I said, “Are you willing to work with me on this and go where I need to go to look at these Torah scrolls?” He says, “No problem, I will go with you where you need to go if you will go with me where I want you to go.”

Now you all, Michael, I've never told this story. It's taken 10 years to get his permission. Michael said this to me when I was in his house, “You have the freedom of Jerusalem, just don't go to the West Bank.” Makes sense to me. Right, Michael? He said, “Just don't go to the West Bank.” Where did the Arab want to take me, you all?

Crowd: The West Bank.

Keith: And I had to make a decision - either Michael or the vision. I decided I would go with the vision, and then eventually Michael would catch up. Can I get an amen on that?

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: See, some of you guys have vision and there are people in your life that just ain't quite with your vision right now. But if you - come on, somebody - will keep doing what He calls you to do, I might take 10 years, but Michael's right there with the vision that God gave me. Amen? It might take 10 years, but God will not be unfaithful.

I went with the man to the West Bank. He took me to Beit Lechem. You know Beit Lechem? Bethlehem. And I was there, and there was nobody on the street, no tourists on the street. I could tell you stories. I mean, I'll tell you some stuff that is sensational, but I want to move on. But if you want to eat lunch with me later, I’ve got some stories. Don't just think Nehemia's got all the stories, okay? I’ve got some stories!

The guy takes me to the West Bank. We're there, we're spending time, we're walking in the streets. There are no tourists there. The church had just been released from this hostage situation. We're walking around. Finally, we get done, we get in the car, I hand him the phone number. He calls the phone number, on the other end of the phone there's a young man speaking perfect Hebrew. Now, he also could speak Hebrew. He spoke at least three languages. Do you guys know if you speak three, you're trilingual? If two, you're bilingual. And if you're one, you're a Methodist American. [laughter] I couldn't speak anything other than English. I couldn't have communicated with the young man, but God, say “God”.

Crowd: God.

Keith: …grabbed an Arab man. Is that possible?

Crowd: Yes.

Keith: To help me fulfill His vision. The Arab man drives me in silence. He talks to the boy on the phone. The boy tells him where he lives. He gets off the phone, the Arab man's face changes. He says, “It is not safe for me to take you where we need to go. This place is called Ma'ale Adumim. It is a Jewish settlement,” is what he called it. And I'm thinking to myself, “Now, you just took me to the West Bank. Get in the car, because we're going to Ma'ale Adumim.”

We get in the car, we go to Ma'ale Adumim. The man who owns the Torah scrolls is Jewish. He happens to be out of town in Greece. He has a friend from South Africa staying at his house watching his family. The Arab man and the Methodist pull up into Ma'ale Adumim, and the white South African meets us. We pull into the place, we look at each other, I’m thinking, “Uh oh, something's happening here.” He takes us into the apartment.

When we get into the apartment, there are one, two, three Torah scrolls. When I see the Torah scrolls, my heart begins to leap. I'm thinking, “You’ve got to be kidding me, I'm so close.” The phone rings. It happens to be the man who lives in Greece - the Jewish man. He calls on the phone. The friend from South Africa tells him, “I have two people here,” an Arab and a Methodist, “they're here to look at the Torah scrolls,” and the Jewish man says, “Let me speak to the man on the phone.” I talk to the Jewish man on the phone. He says, “Do you see the three Torah scrolls?” “Yes.” He says, “Do you know which one you want?” I'm thinking, “Yeah, the one that fits in my empty suitcase.” He says these words: “Take the scroll home, we'll talk about the price later.”

[Crowd cheering]

Keith: The Arab man says to me, “It is a holy book; we must take it home immediately.”

I had never heard anyone call a Torah scroll a holy book. You all, I had been to the seminary, the cemetery, whatever you want to call it. I'm an ordained United Methodist pastor. I've been in ministry for 20 years, I've read and I have preached and I have taught. I have never heard any of my colleagues call a Torah scroll a holy book, but an Arab man says it's holy.

[applause]

We put it in the back of the car. We drive to Michael's house. Michael has set up a meeting with me to meet this man named Nehemia Gordon from the Hebrew University. Now, at this point, I'm thinking one thing. “Do I really have time to meet Nehemia Gordon from the Hebrew University? I just got a Torah scroll!” Then I'm thinking to myself, “Wait a minute, what happens if this guy, Nehemia Gordon from the Hebrew University, could help me with my Torah scroll?”

So we go to dinner, Michael sets up the dinner. And the same thing that happened last night happened at dinner; Michael and Nehemia talked the whole time. [laughter] That's alright. But at the end, they let me speak. And so, at the end, I tell Nehemia Gordon the story. I said, “Nehemia, I've been called here, I had a dream. Here’s a situation, I got a Torah scroll, it's at Michael's house, would you come and see it?” And he kind of hemmed and hawed and he said later to me he thought I simply was nuts. Another good old-fashioned Christian who's been duped, nuts. He's got a fake Torah scroll and he wants me to come and let him… Okay, I'm going to show him something.

So Nehemia Gordon comes with Michael Rood to Michael's house, and he walks up the stairs and he sees the Torah scroll. Now, you all, I think we have here... let's see. No, it is not there. We have there, and that's okay, it doesn't need to be there. We have even better than that, we actually have an actual Torah scroll. But what was interesting about this particular Torah scroll that I selected is that the words on the outside of the Torah scroll, beautiful red velvet, were words from Isaiah, which were a prophetic statement that said people like me will come and get the Torah and bring it to the world.

[applause]

So we walk into Michael's house. Nehemia comes up, we see the Torah scroll, he says, “Do you know what these words are?” And he begins to tell us what the words are in Hebrew. After that, we take the cover of the Torah scroll off, we unroll the Torah scroll in Michael's house, and I say, “Nehemia, would you be willing to read the Torah scroll?” He said, “No problem.” As Nehemia begins to read the Torah scroll in perfect Hebrew, I listen in perfect English. No clue what he's saying, he's reading in Hebrew. Michael's there, I'm there, a few other people are there. I said, “Nehemia, what is it you're reading? He says, “I'm reading here in Leviticus chapter 23 about the holiday of Shavuot.”

Okay, you didn't get it. A black man and an Arab man went to a Jewish man's house. [laughter] Well, a white South African man let us into his house. There were one, two, three Torah scrolls. Let me back up a little further. I had a dream, and in the dream, there was a Torah scroll flying over my head, and at the end of the dream, the Creator said, “Meet Me in My city for Shavuot”!

[crowd cheering]

Now, what I love about Maestro, what I love about Maestro... I have told this story. But you know, as I'm telling this story in the presence of my friend, Michael, there is something that is happening inside me, because Michael was there. And as Nehemia is reading Leviticus chapter 23, I start doing my shout and I start doing my dance, because I'm thinking, “Maestro is working it out again. He's brought a Jewish man to help a Methodist man understand the Torah scroll in Michael Rood's house!”

I say to Nehemia, “Nehemia, you and I are going to be friends.” He said, “No, we're not.” [laughter] I said, “Nehemia, you're going to teach me to read the Torah scroll.” He said, “No, I will not.” He's watching me singing and dancing and shouting. Now you all know where Nehemia got that from. [applause] I'm singing and I'm dancing and I'm shouting, and Michael's over there looking at the moon - what is going on?

The next day, Michael had worked it out for me to be with Nehemia in the Old City for a tour. And over and over again I'd walk with this Jewish man. And as I would walk with him, something happened that was radical. I'd ask him a question, he would answer. However, he would never answer the way that we used to answer in the church. “Well, I think the Bible says blah, blah, blah.” He would sit down and open up his Bible and read the verse. Now, this happened two or three times, and finally I peeked over his shoulder, come to find out that what he was reading was all in Hebrew. This caused me great angst. I'm the Methodist pastor. I'm the one from seminary. I'm the one who's got his eyes open. Why, God, would you have the Jew being able to read something that I can't read?

And I'm going to tell you what happened. After a full day with Nehemia, it is the only argument I have ever won with him. I decided, “Nehemia, you are a part of God's vision, you will fulfill God's vision in my life, you will teach me to read my Torah scroll,” and somebody say, “it happened”.

Crowd: It happened.

Keith: Ten years later, Nehemia and I are traveling around the world speaking, preaching and teaching. And something really interesting happened. As we were going through our studies together, we actually came up with an entire curriculum, where I would learn Hebrew first in the Tanakh. Then Nehemia did something really interesting, you all. And you know, Nehemia doesn't talk now like he used to talk. Ten years ago, Nehemia was a very, very astute, very strong, not of many words. And so, he calls me on the phone, he says, “I've heard from some people that you as a Christian, all you want is my soul. So therefore, we're going to have two rules. The first rule is - I don't try to convert you, and you don't try to convert me.” I said, guess what? “No problem.” Then he says to me, “The second rule is this - no Jesus stuff, no New Testament stuff, only the Tanakh.” And I'm thinking to myself - sounds good to me. Now, why would I say it sounds good to me? Because the Bible that Yeshua read is the same Bible that Nehemia was reading.

Thank you, man of God. You all didn't get excited about that? Let me say that again. The Bible that Yeshua read when he went into the Temple were the Hebrew scriptures, looked just like that. And they have bound that Bible into a book called the Hebrew Bible. Now, I'm going to tell you a secret. I hope the people online don't get offended, but since you're a part of the orchestration of the Creator of the Universe, I'm going to tell you a secret. Yeshua did not read the King James Version.

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: I didn't get enough amens on that.

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: Can I tell you another secret? He didn't even speak English. [laughter] I'm going to tell you something really radical. He didn't even have the Nearly Inspired Version, the NIV. He read the Hebrew text, he read the Ketuvim, he read the Torah, he read the Nevi'im, he read the Tanakh. That is what the word of God was that he had. And Nehemia said to me, “None of that New Testament stuff,” and I said to him, “No problem.”

Then something happened. Nehemia calls me on the phone, about four years later, and he's got this real quiet voice. “Keith?” “Yes, Nehemia?” “I would like to suspend one of the rules.” Did you hear me? The Jewish man called the Methodist and said, “I'm going to suspend one of the rules.” Which rule do you think I thought he wanted to suspend? I'm remembering again - the four spiritual laws, I'm ready, I'm going to get him…

He says, “I would like to study with you the New Testament.” Now, you all, I'm going to tell you something. I was more excited about that rule being suspended than the other one. And let me tell you why. If Nehemia doesn't suspend that rule, you don't get changed. If he doesn't suspend that rule, people around the world aren't being changed. If he doesn't suspend that rule, we stay in the Tanakh and maybe we never get to talk to you. Because when he suspended the rule, he said, “Keith, I have access,” Michael talked about it last night, “to the Hebrew Matthew in Hebrew, and I would like to approach Hebrew Matthew the same way that we approached the Tanakh.”

So for the next few years, all we did was study Tanakh and the Hebrew New Testament Matthew. Then it happened - we come across a section in Hebrew Matthew that changed our lives. It's called the Lord's Prayer. Say “Lord's Prayer”.

Crowd: Lord’s prayer.

Keith: In Hebrew, the Avinu. And as we're reading this particular part of Matthew, and we're studying it, we realize it is unfair for us to keep it to ourselves. We have to share this information with the world. And then the second thing happened. We had some folks who like the King James Bible, and if you open up to Amos chapter 3 verse 3 you will see this verse. We had Jews call Nehemia and Methodists call me and say these simple words, “According to the Bible, you two should not be walking together.” Amos 3:3 says this, “Can two walk together, lest they be agreed?”

And you know what? They were right. If we're reading the King James Bible, there are some things that Nehemia and I do not agree on. For example, he wants to wear a pink tie. I say it's a bad mistake. [laughter] He and I have traveled together, we've been in the same hotel room together, there are some things that he and I just don't agree on. So according to this verse, we shouldn't be walking together. That's what they told us. So we did a really, really radical thing. We opened up the Bible that Yeshua read, together. We turned to Amos 3:3 in his translation, and here's what we see: Amos 3:3 in Hebrew says this, “Can two walk together without having met one another?” Do you see the difference? Now, I could go into depth on the Hebrew word. You know, it's the same word for mo’ed, you know, “meeting”. Come on, say “meeting”. Meeting together, and what we decided is that we would meet together on the common ground of the same Bible that Yeshua read. That was our meeting place.

So this became the place for common ground. You all, it absolutely changed our life. There's a verse I want you to go to in Matthew 22:37. And here's what it says. Now, I'm going to go back to the days when I used to be a good old fashioned Methodist preacher every Sunday morning preaching, and there'd always be a small percentage of people in your church that actually read the Bible. Can I get an amen?

Crowd: Amen.

Keith: And many of you here today are those people. Because as you read the Bible, you started saying, “Now, wait a minute, I've got a question about this and a question about that.” And if you're a good Methodist pastor, what you usually say is, “Well, you need to pray about it,” or “we'll talk about it another time.” But when people begin to ask the kinds of questions that you ask, it can become a problem, especially if you as a pastor have not prepared yourself in the text that you're trying to teach.

Now, let me stop with a little commercial. I will probably get in trouble with this. For two years I have been traveling with Nehemia to messianic congregations around the country, and even different parts of the world. I thought that the Messianics would take the approach of adding a little bit of the Christianity and adding a little bit of the Jewish side of things, and that they would at least from the Jewish side study the word in depth in its original language, history and context. Do you know what I have found? I have yet to find very many messianic preachers, or teachers, who study the very book that Yeshua read. And yet, they say, “I am rabbi, I'm in charge and I'm large, and I've got this, and I've got that.” And I'm saying, “How can you teach the people if you're not interacting with the text?”

Now, this is why you guys are probably not going to let me back this afternoon, because let me say something. If somebody is trying to give you information, and they're trying to give you inspiration, and they can't show you where they got it and show you how they got it, and you can't read it for yourself, tell them, “Sorry, not interested.”

This is what's happening right now in the religious movement. There are too many people that are focusing on the “tions”, you know - the denominations, and the “isms”, you know - the isms. All these sort of things that have nothing to do with this.

Turn to Matthew 22:37. And I'm just going to give it to you from the English, and it says here, “Jesus said after asking the question, what is the most important commandment, Jesus said this, ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.” M-I-N-D, Matthew 22:37. Now, if I do something radical - and this is what I did love about Michael when I met him. He would take his Bible and he would have different versions of his Bible, and he would ask, “Why does this verse not match with this verse?” And he would go in depth asking these questions. So I did the same thing with Matthew 22:37. I looked in Mark, and I looked in Luke, because supposedly Mark and Luke are looking at the same thing that Matthew is looking at, and they should actually quote it exactly the way that Matthew quotes it. But something happens that is what I call “an uh oh moment.” Say “uh oh”.

Crowd: Uh oh.

Keith: Mark 12:30 says this, “You shall love him with all your mind and with all of your strength.” Luke 10:27 says, “You should love him with all your strength and with all of your mind.” Luke switches it, Mark switches it, they both add words to supposedly what Yeshua spoke. That's a problem.

So what happens? The Creator of the Universe, He's called Maestro, He tells the Litvak Jew, Nehemia Gordon: “Nehemia?” “Yes?” “I'm going to need you to study Hebrew Matthew. There are some issues that can be answered, that cannot be answered by those in the movement, because many of those in the movement have not taken the time or had the access to the information that could answer these questions.”

So what do we do? We study the entire book of Matthew, we come across this verse, and something very powerful happens. We go to Hebrew Matthew, and we see this. That in Hebrew Matthew, what Yeshua was doing, he was quoting exactly what verse? Somebody tell me.

Crowd: Deuteronomy 6:5.

Keith: Excellent. He was quoting exactly Deuteronomy 6:5. So what is Mark doing and what is Luke doing? What Mark and Luke are doing is looking at the Hebrew Matthew and saying, “there's a word there that we're not sure what to do with.” And so what both Mark and Luke have done is they have added their interpretation to a Hebrew word that is very difficult to translate. And you already know what this word is. Go to Deuteronomy 6:5 and it says, if he's quoting exactly from the Hebrew Bible, he would say... and this is in English, you all, we’ll get later into the Hebrew. It says, “You should love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your me'od.” Say “me'od”.

Crowd: Me'od.

Keith: Come on again, say “me'od”.

Crowd: Me'od.

Keith: Now, everybody in here knows me'od. You know these verses, you know in Genesis chapter 1 it says, “And God created in the day one,” and He says, “and in the end, it was good.” What is the word for "good" in Hebrew? Say, “tov”.

Crowd: Tov.

Keith: And day two, He didn't say anything. And day three, He says it twice, say, “tov tov”.

Crowd: Tov tov.

Keith: In other words, He looks at it, He says, “It is good.” Day four, He looks at it and it is... Come on, you guys, work with me now! Day five comes and He looks at it and it is...

Crowd: Tov.

Keith: And day six He was so excited after making the animals, He made you and me and He said, “It is tov me'od.” “It is very good.” So what was Yeshua quoting? Simply what was given to Moses. “You shall love the Lord your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and all of your very...” Say “very”.

Crowd: Very.

Keith: All of your... say “very”!

Crowd: Very.

Keith: “All of your everything you have.” This is why Mark said it should be mind and strength, and this is why Luke said it should be strength and mind, and then Nehemia does a radical thing. He says, “Keith, these manuscripts we have, there's one that's very interesting.” Now, the actual discovery was done by a man named George Howard in 1980 of the Hebrew Matthew. He had six manuscripts. He said, prophetically almost, “Somebody will find more than the six manuscripts.” Who is it? Nehemia Gordon. Nehemia ends up going in and finding over 20 manuscripts of Hebrew Matthew. He takes me, when I go to Jerusalem, down into the basement, I was the only Methodist there. I had gotten to the place now where I was able to read some of the information, and it just blew us away.

We get to this particular manuscript called the Breslau Manuscript. Say “Breslau”.

Crowd: Breslau.

Keith: Here's what the Breslau Manuscript is, and you guys can see this. Right here, you see that? That's the Breslau Manuscript that actually quotes exactly from Hebrew, Deuteronomy 6:5. “And you shall love,” and this right here is Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, “your Elohim with all your heart with all your soul, and all of your…” right there is me'od. Say “me'od”.

Crowd: Me'od.

Keith: What is very powerful about this particular manuscript? It is a manuscript that has a very interesting history. Let me stop again. The Hebrew says, word for word, what it says in Deuteronomy. Mark and Luke are simply saying, “We don't know what to do exactly with the word me'od,” so they add an extra word. All of a sudden, we have an answer for a textual difficult situation. But when we look at the manuscript, we find out that this manuscript, the Breslau Manuscript, comes from this place called Breslau. And this manuscript ended up being in a particular library during the time of Hitler.

Now, what Hitler decided on the Night of the Broken Glass is to go in and break shops up and take antiques and take all these things. One of the things that they took when they went in to destroy Breslau was the Breslau Manuscript. It was being kept amongst the Jewish community in Breslau. Did you hear what I said? Hebrew Matthew was being maintained in a Jewish community in Breslau.

Hitler says, “Go in there and get everything you can.” And one of the things they got was the Breslau Manuscript. He said, “Take it to a place called Prague,” which is going to be the place that he's going to make what's called the Museum of the Extinct Race. Now, let me tell you something, you all. Hitler had a plan. His plan was this: “I want the goods from the Jews, but I don't want the Jews.” Can I say it again? “I want the goods from the Jews, so I can put them in a museum and say, ‘Look, it is the Museum of the Extinct Race,’ but I want to extinguish the Jews.”

Now, you all, I've got to stop for a minute, because I am disturbed by what I consider to be anti-Semitism even amongst those who say they love the Jews. Nehemia won't say it, but I've got a man in the room, Michael Rood, who's got enough guts to invite me and Nehemia here and let you know that right now there is anti-Semitism everywhere you look, including, but not limited to, the Messianic movement. “Oh, we want the goods from the Jews, but we don't want the Jews. Of course, unless we can convert them.” Which is exactly what Martin Luther said. Martin Luther said, “I love the language of the Jews. I love the Jews, and I love everything about their doing.” And he went through a transition till all of a sudden, he went with the four spiritual laws. And the Jews said, “Uh-uh, we're not going to take it.” And then guess what Martin Luther said, “I hate the Jews. I hate everything about the Jews. I want the Jews to be wiped out.”

I'm going to tell you something, I've become like Michael. Do you know a Lutheran Church let me come and preach, and I told them the story about their Martin Luther, that Martin Luther became at one point one who loved the Jews, but once he could not convert them he became anti-Semitic and he hated the Jews. And guess who was used for validation for what he did? Hitler used Martin Luther! Now, y'all are getting real quiet, and I don't blame you, because I'm telling you what's real. Anti-Semitism exists. So what happens is Hitler says, “Okay, it's going to be at the Museum of the Extinct Race. I want to extinguish the Jews.”

I will tell you where I'm at. I am so blessed. I am so excited. I am so moved. I am so joyful that Hitler is extinct, and Nehemia is still here. [applause] I'm never going to be popular with the religious institutions. You know, you all, I fly under the flag of United Methodist Church because it works for me. It works for me. But the Methodists don't know what to do with me. “What are we going to do with a guy who keeps hanging out with this Jewish guy preaching about a prayer that Jesus...” And they don't realize, Methodists don't know - Jesus was a Jew. Shhh.

“The word is good. The message is good. It's all good. If he would just leave the Jew out, we'll let him in.” And so, I've had some movements that have said, “We'll invite him, but we won't invite you.” Others say, “We'll invite you, but we won't invite him.” But somebody say, “Michael's got guts!” [applause] We're not popular right now. We're not on the front of the Messianic magazine. We're not being talking about by all the Messianic leaders. They're saying, “Ah, something's wrong with these two. Nehemia might be dealing with people getting away from Yeshua. What about this other guy? He's a Methodist, he's a pagan Christmas-celebrating, we don't know what he is.” They got me making all kinds of, say “assumptions”.

Crowd: Assumptions.

Keith: They're making assumptions about us, and what we've decided to do is this - wherever we are invited, we will go, up until this weekend. I haven't told Nehemia this. Nehemia, I'm about to make a huge declaration today. And I’m going to take my time. Can I take my time? Michael, can I?

Michael: Yeah, we took yours last night. [laughter]

Keith: Amen. I'm going to take my time. For two years Nehemia said we would go everywhere we were invited. We said wherever we are invited, we will go. And he has been in charge of, many times, the itinerary. And he's not a very good logistics guy with itineraries. He has put me in places that I know I should not be. We have been in situations that I know we shouldn't have been. We were just two weeks in Smithfield, North Carolina. I'm going to tell the story right now. The only reason Nehemia invited me to Smithfield, North Carolina, is because he was preaching for nine hours, and he thought, “I can only speak for eight. I need at least Keith to give me an hour.” So he says, “Keith, will you come with me to Smithfield, North Carolina?” “I don't know where Smithfield is. I don't know anything about Smithfield. I don't understand Smithfield.” So what Nehemia said is, “Yeah, we'll be speaking in Raleigh on Friday night and Saturday, then Sunday morning, we're going to go to Smithfield, North Carolina. And then in the afternoon, we're going to hang out with the people, at the pastors, at their house. And then in the evening we're going to speak again.” And I'm thinking, “Man, this Jew, he doesn't understand, he's an Israelite. He doesn't realize, he doesn't even understand the logistics of this thing.” And sometimes, you all, I just have to tell you, sometimes I get mad at Nehemia. He puts me in situations that aren't comfortable!

So we go to Smithfield, North Carolina, to the International Christ Outreach, I think it was called Christ International Outreach. And we're at this church Sunday morning, and what happens is, Nehemia lets me get up first, and then he speaks. And then in the afternoon, we're sitting with the pastor in his house. And as we're sitting there, and his lovely wife, Sheila, has made us food, and now I'm feeling okay. Okay, Nehemia, it wasn't bad. Nehemia is upstairs sleeping. I'm talking to the pastors, and the pastor reaches over, and he says, “Hey, I want to tell you something. Do you know right now where you are?” He says, “Right behind the church is the former house of the grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan.” [laughter] He says, “Let me tell you something else. They used to have a sign that when you came into Smithfield, it said ‘Welcome to Smithfield, Home of the Ku Klux Klan.’”

And I'm thinking, “Oh my god.” Because even though he said it was the former house of the former grand dragon, I'm assuming the grand dragon had kids. You can't tell me just because he's dead there ain't no spirit of Ku Klux Klan in Smithfield, North Carolina. I'm thinking, “Oh, my goodness, and we’ve got to go back tonight!” Now, I hope that y'all know the story. I'm going to tell you the story. When we pulled up to the church, there are five men waiting for us. One man comes around, he opens up and shows us his badge. He says, “I just wanna let y'all know I got your back, I'm packing.” [laughter] I'm thinking, “For what?” Now, after he tells me the story, I'm looking for him! I went in the church that night saying, “Where is he?” You all, we get there. And as we're there, God begins to do something. He begins to do something. I stood up in Smithfield, North Carolina and prophetically said these words. “What is happening this day in Smithfield, North Carolina will span the globe.”

[applause]

Now, let me tell you something. I'm about to end this thing. I speak these words. I say, “You all, there's something happening. Here's a Jewish man who is not a Christian, who is not a Messianic, who is standing up in a Sunday morning church, preaching from the Bible that Yeshua read. Then they let the Methodist who gets up and preaches from the Bible that Yeshua read.” And then the Ru'akh HaKodesh came into the church! [applause] And after I had said the words about revival, Nehemia says to me in the car, “Keith, this is the Smithfield revival.” You know why? Because he and I were changed.

I walked out of dinner last night, I come outside, and Nehemia says, “Somebody’s here.” I look and see - here are the pastors from the Sunday morning church from Smithfield who've come to this event. And all I want Gene and Sheila to do is stand up for a second. Where are you? Excellent. Would you all give them a hand? Stand up, stay there. Gene and Sheila, God is calling you. You are a part of His great symphony. He has ignited even as He did what He did in Smithfield, North Carolina, He has ignited your heart, man of God, He has ignited your heart, woman of God, and together you're about to see things that you've never seen before in your ministry.

[applause]

You see, I'm going to say something more radical, and Nehemia thinks he's going to speak, I'm not going to let him speak the whole day. I'm going to say something more radical. Some of you that are sitting here have decided that God can't work with pastors in the Sunday morning church. Some of you that are sitting here, because of your own experience, you have discounted the possibility that the Creator of the Universe can do what He is doing through them. I want you to look at them and say this: “I'm sorry.” God can do what He wants to do, when He wants to do it, and how He wants to do it. And He's decided to be the orchestrator for an event in Dallas, Texas, where we're going to prepare ourselves - I'm about to let you sit down - we're going to prepare ourselves, you all, for a meeting. But in order to do that, we've got to sanctify our hearts, our minds and our spirits.

Now you may be seated. Let me close with this. For 10 years, you all, I've been dealing with this issue of the story of this verse. And it wasn't until after meeting with Michael that I finally had the courage to do what I knew I was afraid to do. Let me tell you what I was afraid to do. I finally decided to study the verse that the woman told me the scroll was going to open up to.

Now, let me tell you why I didn't want to study the verse. Because Ezekiel is a tough book. I'd rather just be with Nehemia and tell the stories and do all this wonderful stuff. Well, as a result of meeting with Michael, I opened up my Bible and I found something radical, you guys. Ezekiel chapter 1 verse 3. And if we read it in the English, it simply says, “The word of the Lord came expressly to Ezekiel son of Buzi in the land of the Chaldeans by the river Chebar and there the hand of the Lord came upon him.” Why did I not want to study that verse? Because I was afraid. I said, “Father, this is a good thing, and You've done what You've done in my life, and I appreciate that.” But whenever I'd look at the verse in English, I said, “I don't think I want to look at that verse in Hebrew. There might be something there that's going to cause me to even be pushed a little bit further.”

But after meeting with Michael, after the beginning of the Smithfield revival, the Creator of the Universe called me to look at Ezekiel chapter 1 verse 3 in the language, history and context of which it was preached.

So here's what I saw. If you look at this particular verse, and you open up this book, that is what you would see. The first thing I did when I was looking at this verse was the first two words. The first two words are very unique. It's the only time in the entire Tanakh where these two words are used exactly like this, in the entire Tanakh. And then after those two words, there's another word, which I understand, and then there are those four letters. Now, I might as well tell you guys right now… look at your neighbor and say “controversy”.

Crowd: Controversy.

Keith: When I see those four letters, if I look at the English and I say, “Lord,” I move quickly. When I look in the Hebrew Bible and I see Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, I have to slow down. 6,828 times, it's twice in this verse. His name, His personal name, which He proclaimed to the people prophetically, which will be proclaimed in the last day, and He's waiting for people now to begin to proclaim His name. But when I read these first four words, something really radical happens. It says in Hebrew this, “Hayo haya.” Say “hayo haya”.

Crowd: Hayo haya.

Keith: Let me back up for a second. Is Karen here? Where’s Karen Taylor? Would you do me a favor, just stand to your feet real quick. I want you to do something, Karen, if you would. I want you to imagine that you're singing the first two words in Ezekiel 1:3, and the words are this: hayo haya. Just sing those two words.

Karen: [singing] Hayo haya.

Keith: Hallelujah, have a seat. The next two words are connected. The next two words are devar, and then immediately it goes into Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey. Now, here comes the controversy. If I read it in the Hebrew, it sounds like a song. If I read it without tradition, if I read it about what the popular pronunciation is, if I read it without all of the controversy, and I read it according to my Hebrew Bible, it goes something like this: hayo haya devar Yehovah. Did you hear that? Karen, help me. Stand to your feet. Hayo haya devar Yehovah.

Karen: [singing] Hayo haya devar Yehovah.

Keith: One more time. Hayo haya devar Yehovah.

Karen: [singing] Hayo haya devar Yehovah.

Keith: Amen. You're getting close, sister. By the end of the weekend, you'll be ready for that verse. There is a rhythmic, there is a melodic thing that's happening even in Ezekiel 1:3. [singing] Hayo haya devar Yehovah. And then it goes on and He says to Yekhezkel, which means God strengthens. Say “God strengthens”. This is his name. So then it says he's a Kohen, and it goes on to the last part. I'm going to end with this, it says, “And upon him there was the yad of Yehovah,” the hand of the Creator of the Universe.

You all, I have been struggling, I've been battling. I told Nehemia - publicly I'm telling him this - no more “everywhere we're invited”. The only place I'm going is where I'm sent. Hear me, man of God. Two years I went with you wherever you wanted me to go. But from now on, I will only go where He sends me, and I will only go with the yad, the hand of Yehovah upon my head. And I am convinced, you all, that there's something happening right now. He wants to strengthen His people. He wants to lead them. He wants to guide them. He wants to move them. He wants to shake them. He wants to call Jew, he wants to call Methodist, he wants to call Messianic. He wants to call you, He wants to call me, He wants to call whoever is willing to hear His call, because He's putting together a beautiful symphony!

Is there somebody in the house that'll say, “I can be used, I'm willing to be used. Make me a French horn, make me an oboe. Make me a timpani.” Is there anybody that would say, “I'm willing, I'm willing, I'm willing?” Hallelujah! So hear the word of Yehovah. He's looking for a people that are willing to be strengthened by Him.

Now, I would like to do something. Everyone stand to your feet. This was just the warmup for the real show. Nehemia is going to speak, then we're going to break, then Nehemia is going to speak, and then I get to really finish what I really wanted to say. But what I want to do in all honor, I want to have you do something for me. This man, Nehemia Gordon, is being persecuted by his own for being here with you. I've been on the phone with Nehemia, talking to people that are leaders in his movement, saying, “You’ve got to explain to us what he is going to do there.” And here's what we have decided. We are going to do His will His way.

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