Live Free with Josh Howerton - Was the Book of Enoch BANNED from the Bible...!? | Live Free with Josh Howerton
Episode Date: December 8, 2025In this Christmas episode of LIVE FREE, Pastors Josh Howerton, Paul Cunningham, and Carlos Erazo explore the growing interest in the Book of Enoch, angelology, and viral claims that the Bible was “a...ltered” or banned. They walk through the history of the biblical canon, explaining why Jude’s reference to Enoch doesn’t validate the entire book. They dive into the perspective that has gained attention on platforms like Joe Rogan’s podcast to bring clarity to Christians. This episode calls believers to trust God’s Word, resist fear-driven speculation, and focus on the truth & authority already revealed in Scripture. 👍 Like, Comment, & Subscribe for more life-changing podcasts! 🔔 Turn on notifications so you never miss an update! 📝 SHOW NOTES Subscribe now to receive the show notes directly in your inbox with each new episode. These notes are filled with key insights and scripture to help you reflect and grow deeper in your faith – https://lakepointe.church/shownotes 👇 DON’T MISS OUT! Have you recently said "YES" to Jesus? It's time to take your next step. Click the link for more info on baptism: https://lakepointe.church/baptism/ ⛪ ABOUT LAKEPOINTE CHURCH: We believe that Lakepointe is a movement for all people to Know God, Find Freedom, Discover their Calling, and Make a Difference. With 7 DFW locations and programs for all ages, there's something for everyone. 🤝 Support this ministry and help us reach more people with the Gospel: https://lakepointe.church/give STAY CONNECTED: 🌐 Website: https://lakepointe.church/ 👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lpconnect/ 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lpconnect 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@lakepointechurch FOLLOW PASTOR JOSH: 👍 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HowertonJosh/ 📸 Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/josh_howerton/?hl=en 🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@howertonjosh 🎧 LISTEN ON THE GO! ▶️ Live Free on Spotify / https://open.spotify.com/show/353ryGdZNlebaiqkCcy3Yc ▶️ Live Free on Apple Podcasts / https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/live-free-with-josh-howerton/id1669321198
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Live Free with Pastor Josh Howardton.
We're so glad you're here.
Lake Point Church is a movement for all people to know Jesus,
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And this weekly podcast is all about helping you do just that.
Each episode is a deep dive into the Word of God,
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Now, let's dive into today's episode.
Well, hey, welcome back to another episode of the Live Free podcast.
My name is Carlos Arraso,
and I'm here with Pastor Josh Houten and Paul Cunningham,
and we are coming to you from Lake Point Church in Dallas, Texas,
and on this episode, we will be talking about the book of Enoch,
should Christians teach their kids about Santa Claus?
And we're going to be responding to this viral 15 million view video
that is confusing literally millions of Christians.
Bro, I bet I had, no joke, at least 20 church members send me this thing, and that thing shook people.
It kind of went viral out of nowhere.
Bro, it shook people.
So, and this dude, as you're going to see, he essentially takes, like, a bouquet of every myth about the origins of the Bible and Christianity, and he just clumped them all into one and threw him at you.
That's right.
So, like, we're going to hit this.
It's going to be fun.
It's going to be a fun episode.
You guys doing good?
Doing great.
I would be better if you had a cowboy hat on.
Bro, I have an announcement, first of all, okay.
Okay.
I have a very important announcement.
I watched Tunesone.
Yay!
And I was going to bring a cowboy hat because I don't own any, but Amazon Prime did not come through.
Dang, dude.
This leads to a crucial moment, though.
What did you think?
But hold on before I said that.
I need a review.
I need a review.
What's an El Salvadorian?
Because it's very Americana.
Yeah.
I will say this.
I did buy my first pair of boots.
Yeah, he did.
So, I don't know, you might see me with some boots in a little bit.
I liked it.
I thought it was good.
I will say this, probably not my best date night movie.
Carlos texted us and he was like, date night, what's Brooke going to think?
Me and Paul were like, it's probably good enough for her to like it.
I mean, she said she liked it.
I mean, Brooke is open-minded, you know.
You know, it was probably not the best date-knit movie.
But I liked it, man.
I can see how much of a classic it is.
It's full of like epic lines.
It's like the whole movie.
Yeah. A lot of things made more sense.
Top five quotable movie of all time.
I was about to ask what your favorite line or moment was.
I'm your huckleberry.
I'm your huckleberry.
That's a classic.
I'm your huckleberry.
Twice.
Yeah, that was pretty good.
Okay.
Before we get into this, can I do something I wish I would have known on last week's pod?
Please do.
Okay.
So actually, first of all, we talked about this last week's pot.
We just finished Christmas at the movies was last week.
Dude, did you guys know this?
I don't know if you knew this.
All the data ended up coming in.
It was over 33,000 people in person at services that week.
That's nice.
And heads up, there were tons of live free listeners who had not ever hit a Lake Point campus before that came.
So shout out Live Free Nation.
Let's go, man.
But cram and 33,000 in there was amazing.
We keep on hearing stories of people literally flying.
from different states.
I know, it's just to come say hi.
All right, now.
Now, now, here's, so shout out,
Live Free Nation.
Here's what I wish I had known.
All right, so this dude,
his name's Jeremy Wayne Tate,
I don't know anything about this guy.
I ran across this and he had this post
that also went viral about how Home Alone is a Christian movie.
Brothers kills me.
I was like, how did I not know this?
All right, so like, we're gonna show screenshots
because Jason and these guys are telling me
that they'll take the episode down off of YouTube
if we play the clip.
All right, so here, so go to the first one.
So that you know, no, no, no, the first one.
The first, uh, that one.
So it's the, it's the, uh, the scene where Kevin's walking into the church, right?
And so I'm going to read this.
This is nuts.
I can't really know this this before.
He says, watch this scene very carefully where Kevin is drawn into the beauty and warmth of the church.
As he walks inside to, oh, holy night, he hears the words, fall on your knees.
Oh, hear the angel voices.
Now, next screenshot, I'm setting the mood.
Yeah, I like it.
A sanctuary candle passes across the foreground, indicating that Christ is present inside the church.
Then next screenshot, Kevin has an encounter with a Christ figure.
Now, if you think this is crazy, just stick with me for a second.
Kevin has an encounter with a Christ figure, Old Man Marley.
Now, this isn't in the post, but I'll just point this out.
When you first meet Old Man Marley in the movie, what's he doing?
He's like shoveling snow, right?
Shovel and stuff, but remember what's he got in his...
Salting.
He's salting the earth.
Oh.
He's salting the earth.
Okay?
Now, so check this out.
So old man Marley, Christ's figure,
Kevin makes a confession to him,
then shakes his hand and we see a bandage on Marley's hand.
Now check this out, bro.
Check this out.
It's never explained in the movie why his hand is
wounded. But earlier in the movie, we see, drum roll, go to that next one, go to the next one.
His hand is pierced all the way through. So I actually had two pictures. Do you have both of
in Trinity? So top there, blood. Go back to the other one. Bottom blood. His hand is pierced
all the way through like the nails driven through Christ's hands on the cross. At the end of the
movie, Kevin cannot save himself from the burglars. And so Marley, um,
appears again to rescue him.
Home alone is a Christian movie.
Good.
Wow.
Isn't that amazing?
That's crazy.
I've never heard this before.
It's compelling.
It's compelling.
I'll also say this.
Do you have the picture?
Actually, I don't, nah, I didn't send it to you.
Here's another thing that's interesting.
At the end of the movie, his hands are healed.
When he shows up to save Kevin.
And he says hi.
And he says hi.
And he says hi.
And he says hi.
And he waves.
his hands are healed. So I don't know, man. Could be something there. Home-up. I like it. I like it. I like
I appreciate it. I'm a fan. I think there's enough smoke that there might be some fire. Let's put it that way.
I was like, he's not buying it, bro. He's like, it's pretty cute, but I'm not buying it. I saw that post on Monday and the same thing. Like, look at the day after. I mean, it's the day after at the movies. And I saw it and I liked it. But at the same time, I was like, okay. I mean, I like. So then I read in the comments that I guess the guy that wrote the screen,
is like a devout Catholic.
So, I mean, there could be.
I like it.
Could be something there.
I'm actually convinced more.
I'm in.
Yeah.
Thank you, Carlos.
Thank you, Carlos.
Paul is a little more of a skeptic.
It's okay.
With some of the stuff that we're covered today, I think that's why I've been studying
up and I'm more in a skeptic mood for the book of Enoch.
Yeah.
Well, we'll get there.
We get all the stuff in the Bible we're supposed to, all the things.
Paul's about debunking myths today.
Today, that's probably why.
I'm a little bit more of a skeptical mood because of that.
That's all.
Speaking of Christmas services, in two weeks, we have.
we have our Canada like Christmas services.
How many do we have? Do you know?
A bunch.
Over 30.
Yeah.
So you mentioned for people that maybe are within driving distance.
You got to come.
We want to see you here.
But even if you're not, we love for you.
Come say hi.
Come say hi.
It's going to be fun.
And so if you want more information, text the word Christmas to 20411.
If you're curious about which one you can be joining us.
Every week, we do a head giveaway as well.
And by the way, we had this dispute that we need to settle this one time for.
people setting up their Christmas trees before Thanksgiving.
It seems like the winner is, uh, drum roll please.
After Thanksgiving.
Ah, that's the wrong answer.
The wrong answer.
Paul, you think that's the wrong answer?
I used to, and then I got married.
And now we do it before.
We have a winner because we do this every week.
So winner of this week of last week's was Eggman Tim.
So that's a...
Why does YouTube assign weird names?
YouTube assigns weird
usernames.
I actually Googled that name
just to make sure
that we're not showing
anything inappropriate here
so it's fine.
Yeah, I don't know man.
All right, that's good.
So hey, for this winner
or for this week's giveaway
here's what I want you to comment.
Comment below
to enter this week's giveaway
Christmas pajamas for adults
cringe or awesome.
Cringe or awesome.
So comment below, cringe or awesome
and you will be participating
in today's giveaway.
And then we'll pick somebody
and send a hat.
We'll pick a winner and we'll, yeah, that's right.
And then one more thing before we dive in.
Hey, thanks for liking, subscribing, sharing all the things.
Also, we believe that discipleship happens in relationships.
And your next step after listening to this podcast is community,
find your band of brothers and find your people.
And this is why we've compiled all key takeaways, additional content and discussion questions coming from this episode.
So you can use it as a tool to take it to your life group.
And so to get the show notes, aka our discipleship guide, text the word notes to 20411 or go to lakepoint.
That church slash show notes.
Pastor Josh, I have a question for you.
I'm prepared.
What?
Did it make it to the sermon?
Okay.
I didn't say, I will allow it.
I was going to ask you if you allow that question.
A lot, honestly, didn't make it in the sermon.
Because, so here's what we're doing.
We're in a series called Glad Times We Bring.
It's really interesting when the angels show up in Luke chapter 2, and we're going
deep dive this here for a second.
They essentially, they announce four things to the shepherds.
Fear not, good news, great joy, all people.
And so what we're doing during the series is like we're just, we're just,
We're deep diving on each of those.
Fear not, fear not, good news, great joy, all people.
That's what Christmas does for the human soul.
So a few things, there's a lot here.
We did, it was Luke 2, 8 through 14.
So this is the most famous Christmas account in the scriptures.
Couple things are really interesting.
Number one, so if we're gonna zoom out
and get a running start theologically.
So a lot of people miss this.
The Old Testament ends last,
last, the last verses the book Malachi, bro, I didn't, I didn't know this until last two weeks.
The last verses of the book of Malachi, which is obviously the last book of the Old Testament.
The last verses prophesied about a coming Messiah.
And dude, one of the things it says is that there's going to come a quote unquote son of
righteousness with healing in his wings.
So it's going to turn the hearts of the children of the fathers and the hearts of the fathers
of the children.
So then essentially God leaves Israel on red.
It's like the bubbles, you know, on the, on the.
for 400 years, okay?
So that is prophesied by the coming Messiah.
Dude, I didn't know this.
So when Malachi says he's going to have healing in his wings,
the Hebrew, I stumbled across this this week.
The Hebrew word is the Hebrew word Knaf,
which can get translated wings
or it can get translated a fringe or an edge, like of a garment.
So I didn't know this.
So then, okay, this is a little deep cut.
Jesus shows up.
Jesus is obviously a rabbi.
he's a teacher.
And when the rabbis, what they would wear is that they wear these robes that would have these,
like these fringe tassels on their robes.
The word that was used for those was Knaf.
In other words, that's the rabbi's wings.
So, dude, this is really interesting.
Then you fast forward, you go to Mark Chapter 5.
You got the woman with the issue of blood, right?
Bro, okay, you know what I'm going with this?
You got the woman with the issue of blood.
I've read that story a million times and been like, man,
why did she just walk up to Jesus, and it specifically says she touches the edge of his garment
expecting to be healed.
Bro, this lady had read Malachi chapter 4, and she knew for 400 years they've been waiting
for a Messiah to come who would have, quote, healing in his wings.
And she had faith that this is the one who was promised.
And so in faith to Malachi chapter 4, she walks up.
and touches the fringe, the kanaf of his garment.
Wow.
Boom, she's healed.
Wow.
And all of it is a fulfillment of the messianic prophecy from Malachi chapter four that
leads up to, obviously the very next thing that happens in the biblical narrative is the birth of Christ.
So it's like you get this running.
Have you ever heard that before?
I've never heard that before.
Bro, I stumbled across that this week.
That's absolutely amazing.
I love that.
Let me do a couple other things for quick.
Number one, obviously this stuff is cool.
It's just like a little theology nerd.
deep dive stuff. Obviously, Jesus is born in Bethlehem. I'm sure both you guys know this,
that Bethlehem is a Hebrew conjunctive word that means house of bread, which is kind of cool
because Jesus obviously, number one, he says, man should not live on bread alone, but in every word
that comes to the mouth of God. Jesus is the Lagos. Jesus is the word from God, but then also
Jesus says he's the bread of life. So I just think, like you, so almost nowhere else in the Bible,
Do you start getting these sovereign, like crazy deep cuts?
There's no way this could have been orchestrated by anybody but a sovereign God.
You get that there.
Golly, dude, there's a bunch I didn't get in.
I don't want to labor this.
It's a fun little fact.
Joseph was probably not a carpenter.
This is very interesting.
People get that for Matthew 13.
In Matthew 13, people are like skeptical of Jesus.
And they're like, man, is not this the, and our English Bible,
often translated, is not this, Joseph the carpenter's son.
That's actually, it's a little translation error that goes back, apparently a few hundred years.
The Greek word is tecton or technon, technon or tecton.
That it actually, what it should be translated is simply craftsman or builder.
So what happened was when they were originally translating it,
what craftsmen primarily worked with was wood.
But in Jesus' day, nine out of ten craftsmen probably,
would have been stone, not wood.
So Jesus, actually, Joseph and Jesus were probably stone masons
more than they were carpenters.
It's just a fun little fact.
A couple of things that I do want to hit that didn't make it in.
Obviously, very interesting theologians
who pointed this out for centuries,
it's kind of odd that the angels appear to the shepherds.
I think this becomes like very significant here in a second.
So like, just give me a second on this,
and then we'll start processing this, okay?
so shepherds it's a little weird why appear to the shepherds why not an emperor why not a
chief priest so deal on shepherds is essentially like um they were kind of like low lowest dudes
on the blue collar totem pole in israel so like if you couldn't do anything else you kind of
got stuck with she like if you dropped out of community college to smoke weed and watch porn you
became a shepherd like that's i'm serious like they were just like rough around the edges
like blue-collar dudes, like not awesome dudes.
So much so, from what I read this week,
Shepherds' testimony were not admissible in court
because they were like, these guys are just a bunch of liars.
They're just a bunch of a ruff run.
They'd fight you at the drop of hat.
Think like your normal Philadelphia Eagles fan.
And it's like, guess what you got on a shepherd?
So then, okay, well, then why?
It seems significant.
Why do these angels appear to the Shepherds
to announce the coming. There's two things going on here. Number one, what you have is,
is God is acknowledging the type of people that he came for. So again, man, it's like, hey, it's not
that good people are in and bad people are out, and it's not that religious people are in,
and irreligious people are out. It is that the humble, the lowest are in, the people who can
admit their need, they're in and the proud are out. So this is really fun. If we ever go to
Israel, sometime we all need to go to Israel together. If we ever go to Israel together, if you go to
Bethlehem, they built a Catholic church, built, Catholic Church essentially took every cool site
and ruined it by sticking a chapel on top of it. That's like what they did. So they did this
at the likely place of Jesus' birth. Like there's a little cave there, and it just fits the
geographic description. And the church of the nativity at Jesus's birth, they stuck a little chapel there.
It's actually kind of cool.
Trini, go ahead and toss that up.
This was a cool move.
When the Catholic Church built the Church of Nativity,
the entrance to the Church and Nativity is that door right there.
It's like two and a half, three feet tall.
And they intentionally built the door
so that the only way to enter into the presence of God
would be to lower yourself in order to enter.
So cool.
Amazing.
That's it.
That even hits on a common theme.
in chapter two, really, Luke 2 is extremely politically subversive. At the very beginning of the
chapter, you get Caesar Augustus. And here's a few titles for Caesar that would have been used of him,
Savior and Lord. And that he would have brought peace on earth, it was called the Pax Romana.
And so all of a sudden here, waters two of the three titles that Jesus has given, Savior and Lord.
So they're saying, hey, Caesar isn't Savior and Lord. Jesus is Savior and Lord. Jesus is King.
That's it, dude.
And it says, and he is bringing peace on earth to those on whom his favor rest.
And whereas Caesar would have come in in in pomp and circumstance, the savior and king of the world comes in in a manger and appears to the lolliest of lowly.
So it's this very politically subversive message.
And also, I don't know if you were going to hit this, but around Bethlehem was where they would have raised many of the lambs that were slaughtered.
You beat me to it.
Oh, no, no, no.
Keep going.
Keep on.
Oh, and so even the idea of appearing to the shepherds.
That's right.
the lamb of God.
That's right.
It has come to be slain for the sins of the world.
All of a sudden, you get this image in Bethlehem that these were the lambs that were
slain.
Like, no, this is the lamb that will replace all those lambs once and for all.
Dude, you totally made me too much.
I'm sorry.
Because this is amazing.
All right.
So there's another thing.
You know, we do Christmas in the winter.
Almost certainly we know because it says the shepherds were keeping watch over their flocks in the fields at night.
We know from like Jewish historian.
and things that shepherds would not sleep out in the fields with their flocks at night during the
winter months. They would only do that during the summer months. So it's probably warm. Here's the other
thing we know. Okay, bro, this is amazing. Here's the other thing we know is the day of atonement.
So like the peak day where lambs need to be slain typically would fall on the calendar in September.
So here's what a lot of people think are happening. Bethlehem is only a few miles from Jerusalem.
It's not far at all, like literally walking distance from Jerusalem.
So what some people think is happening is the angels are coming to these shepherds.
They're literally raising the lambs in their fields.
Maybe sometime in August, warm months.
That's why they're out in the fields at night.
They're literally raising the lambs that are going to be slain at the day of atonement.
And the angels are essentially coming to say, you're not going to be needing those anymore.
Because the lamb is coming.
He's going to be the sacrients.
to end all sacrifices.
So, dude, there's a lot going on here, man.
I love it too, because back to what you were saying, Josh,
even the fact that God wanted to find these shepherds
that were the lowest of the lowest,
and, you know, again, just this idea that God chooses those
whom the world considers unworthy,
not just to bring blessings to them,
but also to empower them to bring blessing to people around them.
Because if you keep reading, it's interesting,
these shepherds become the first evangelist of this gospel.
Even before the disciples, before the women at the tomb, before Paul, these shepherds,
the Bible says in verse 16, they hurried off and spread the word concerning what had been told
them about this child and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds had said to them.
And so it's like, you know, God not only revealed himself to them, but he also empowered them to be
the evangelist of this gospel.
And so, again, I think it goes back to this is what God does for us.
He chooses those that are considered unworthy by other people.
Maybe you're thinking, man, I'm not as impressive as, you know, Paul or Josh or this other person that God seems to be using mightily.
Well, God, that's why God chooses you because he wants to demonstrate his power through you.
Right.
It's amazing.
Yeah, it's interesting because in a sense, yeah, they're the first ones.
And then when you mentioned that Shepherds, their testimony was not in court.
You know, who else's wasn't?
Women, who they were the first witnesses of the resurrection.
And so it's just a common theme throughout.
Yeah, that's good.
Can I do a couple of deep cuts?
Yeah.
I love this stuff so much.
This kind of stuff, I was like, wow, I wish I had time we get in this sermon.
So number one, it's like, let me just, let me get a run and start and go back to the sacrifice end all sacrifices.
All right.
So again, you have a couple hints.
He appears the shepherds.
The shepherds are, it's possible they're raising the lambs that are going to be slain of the day of atonement.
Okay.
That's interesting.
Number two, whenever it says, this passage.
who says in Luke 2, that they, verse, it says verse 7,
and she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in swaddling claws.
And then it says, and laid him in a manger.
Okay.
Now, I took this picture, go ahead and toss that manger up.
I took this picture.
If you go to Israel, these mangers, that's a manger.
And they would typically be in like horse stalls or animal stalls.
So think about this.
You already have, they're appearing to shepherds who are raising lambs to be slain.
then when Jesus is born, they announce his birth to those shepherds.
They put Jesus in the same thing that a newborn spotless lamb would be put in upon its birth.
Bro, this is like inception level stuff, okay?
So then, okay, let's go a layer deeper.
So this is how when theologians talk about there's a scarlet thread that runs this way from Genesis to free in Revelation.
and it's all the slain lamb.
Okay, so here's, it culminates in this story.
Okay.
So like, just give me 30 seconds here, okay?
So you get Genesis 1 and 2, Adam and Eve sin.
That is the first appearance of fear.
I mentioned this in the sermon.
That's the first appearance of fear in the entire Bible.
So then God goes and finds them.
Theologians called the proto-evangelion,
the first telling of the gospel.
In Genesis 3, Adam and Eve sin, God puts on his sitka gear,
and he goes and it says he kills an innocent animal
and then he think about it he covers them in their sin
with the skins he covers them with the slain animal
maybe maybe a spotless lamb all right then you fast forward
bro and then you get to the abrahamic covenant genesis 15
god establishes the abrahamic covenant by the way
both of the genealogies of jesus in luke and matthew
are extremely explicit they have to trace the line of
of Jesus back to Abraham. Interesting. Why? Okay. So then Abraham, he's taken Isaac up on the mountain,
right? We know this story. And Isaac's like, Jesus, where's the sacrifice? Or no, he's Abraham.
Where's the sacrifice? And essentially it's like, well, Isaac, you're the sacrifice. And he gets up there
and think about it, think about it. Abraham's son, his only son that he loves, he's about to sacrifice.
and then at just the right time they look over and God provides another innocent animal,
ram caught in a thicket.
They sacrifice the ram and the sun goes free.
Okay, that's very interesting.
Now, you skip forward and obviously you get to the Passover.
Passover in ancient Egypt, angel of death is coming by.
Anywhere the angel of death saw the blood of the lamb on the doorposts and the lentils of the homes.
We talked about this in sermons before when they would have taken the hyssop,
dipped it in the blood of the lamb and put it on the sides and the top of the doors.
A lot of Bible scholars say you would literally have been walking through Egypt and would have seen
bloody crosses on the front of all these doors.
And anywhere the angel of death saw the blood of a slain lamb and a cross, it decided to pass
over and not visit the sins of the house on the house.
Now skip forward.
We're building to Luke chapter two, bro.
Wow.
Okay, then skip forward.
then after this they go out in the wilderness and God gives the law at the giving of the law
God begins to outline what's called the day of atonement and dude I could spend 30 minutes we could
talk about the day of atonement and just deep dive on it the day of atonement was the one day
every year if you get in the temple if we go back and look at the temple there was like a room inside
of a room inside of a room that was the holy of holies where the presence of god was
all this is going to make sense here in a second just stick with me bro this is important
and what separated the presence of god from the people of god was a curtain and that
curtain, a woven curtain would have been about the literally the thickness of your hand.
Ain't nobody going to tear that curtain, like a woven curtain, the thickness of your hand.
One day a year, and only one day a year, only one dude, the high priest, chief high priest,
he would have to go through all these cleansing rituals.
He'd have to slay again, check it out, a spotless, innocent lamb.
And he would have to purify both himself and all the instruments of the temple with the blood
of the spotless, innocent lamb.
and as long as he was covered with the blood of the spotless innocent lamb that one day a year they would literally
tie this is a true story man they would literally tie a rope to the dude's ankle and he could one day a year
walk into the presence of god into the room inside of a room inside of a room behind the curtain
and the people have an intercede for the people of god in the presence of god the reason they tied
the rope to his ankle was if he had any unconfessed sin if there was any impurity on him then he would
die and they needed a way to pull his body out of there. Okay, so that's Day of Atonement. Then
you get to stink in Luke chapter 2 and we've had thousands of years of slain lamb, slain lamb,
and then who do the angels appear to? Shepherds raising the lambs to be slain on the day of
Atonement. What do they put Jesus in? A manger that a spotless lamb when it was firstborn would
have been put in. And then dude, John the Baptist seized Jesus. You remember this? John the Baptist
Jesus in just a few chapters. My goodness. There's a reason we get emotional as a Christian when you
talk about this is Jesus on the road to Amas, did not our hearts burn within us. John the Baptist
sees Jesus for the first time. You remember what he says? Behold the Lamb of God that takes away
the sins of the world. All right. Now, skip ahead again, bro. Then you get to the Last Supper.
And at the Last Supper, it's really interesting. Everything that would have been normally
at a Passover meal is mentioned in the Bible.
The bread, the cup, the spices,
there's one thing that's not mentioned.
The lamb.
They should have been eating the lamb.
It's never mentioned in any of the gospels.
And the implication is the lamb is not on the table
because the lamb is sitting at the table.
So then, bro.
Keeps going.
Bro, I think he keeps going, bro.
So then you get to the cross.
And if you go, the Bible tells us exactly the hour at which Jesus was crucified.
The hour at which Jesus was crucified is exactly the hour at which the lamb was commanded
to be slain for the Passover meal.
It is the exact same hour that the lamb of God is slain on the cross, exact same hour,
that the lamb should have been slain for the day of atonement.
So then Jesus is on the cross.
And I just want to point this out, bro.
Jesus never cries out in pain ever.
He is not recorded as crying out in pain when they beat him.
He is not recorded as crying out in pain when they flogging with a cat of nine tails
and literally strip the flesh off his back.
He is not recorded as crying out in pain whenever the exposed nerve endings of his back
have a roughshod splinter-filled cross rubbing up and down.
There is one time and one time only that Jesus ever is recorded as crying out of him.
Jesus was a dude.
Like he could, Jesus could handle some pain.
But there's one time where Jesus is recorded as crying out.
The Bible says that darkness began to fall.
And when that darkness fell,
Jesus cried out in a loud voice,
Eloy, Eloy, Lama Salbachtani.
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Only time Jesus ever cries out.
Why did Jesus never cry out in pain?
But in that moment when the sky goes dark,
Jesus cries out.
here's why. Because as the sky's dark for three hours, what's happening is God the father was
turning his back on the son so that he could turn his face toward you. And Jesus had lived his
entire life in such face-to-face intimacy with the father that for that one second to have that
intimacy with the father taken from him, that was his breaking point. And that's when he cries out,
my God, my God. Why have you forsaken me? Now, let's go one layer deeper. The Bible says at that
specific moment, the curtain that separated the presence of God from the people of God, the curtain
at the front of the Holy of Holies. Remember, bro, this thing's a woven curtain as thick as your hand.
Ain't nobody's going to tear that thing. The Bible says at that moment, the curtain was torn.
and it says from top to bottom, not bottom to top, top to bottom, tall curtain.
The implication is God tore the veil.
God tore it.
Why?
Because when Jesus was separated from God, everything that separated us from God was removed.
He was separated from the Father so that we could be united to the Father, which brings us all the way back to
Luke chapter two. Behold the Lamb of God born to take away the sins of the world. Come on. So good.
We can keep going. Wow. Because like in Revelation, it says the lamb slain from before the
foundation of the world. So in other words, cross was always plan A. It was always plan A. It was always
plan A. And then even like as you're talking through the, you know, the 10th plague,
Another connection, ninth plague, you remember what it was?
Oh, dude, was that the darkness?
It covers the land.
Tenth plague.
Oh, bro.
That's of the firstborn.
Whoa.
On the cross.
Darkness covers the land and then death of the son of God.
I've never heard that before.
And to think about it, though, to even your connection in the gospel, which was so beautiful, Pastor Josh, was in those plagues, God in the old testament, was taking out his wrath on his enemies.
It was on the enemies of God.
but on the cross Jesus becomes an enemy on behalf of the enemies of God so that we might become
sons and daughters of God and friends of God. That's the gospel.
Bro, in the words of my daughter, clock it.
That's so good, that's so good, man.
The Bible is just like, there's just so much more.
Like it's rich, rich, rich with like parallels and connections and echo.
It's one book.
That's why we started this stinking podcast.
Because there's all this stuff like that, then I'm like, I never.
never have time to get that into certain.
Can I do one more deep cut?
Go ahead.
Let me do one more and then we're going on.
There's more layers of the Christmas story
than like anything else in the whole Bible.
Now first of all, if this makes it into Christmas Eve
service sermons, I get a mulligan.
I'm allowed to say this twice.
But just in case it doesn't, I want to get it in.
So do the other people that, should I do this?
All right, I'm gonna do it real quick.
The other people that mention that visit Jesus,
in addition to the, you know, the shepherd,
they do their thing are the magi.
Do you know the thing about the magi?
I'm not sure we're going on.
This is, okay, this is amazing.
All right.
Here's another like, I can't believe the Bible's that cool.
So for people have always wondered, like,
there's these weird magi, mysterious magi,
which is just a short for a magician.
They just show up.
It's like, who are these magic?
Who are these magicians?
And it says, magi from the east.
That's all we know about them.
Magi from the, so people are like, where in the world are these stinking magi come from?
Who are these guys?
All right, all right, bro.
Rewind, I think it's 600 years.
Rewind 600 years to the book of Daniel in the Bible.
So Babylon conquers Israel.
This is like the best Christmas deep cut ever.
Babylon conquers Israel.
When Babylon conquers Israel, they plunder all the gold from the temple and they take them into Nebuchadnezzar's thing.
and they got all the gold from the temple
and they make all this stuff out of it, all right?
So then the Bible tells us,
Daniel gets set up over the magi in Babylon.
The astrologers.
Yeah, but it specifically uses the word magi.
He gets set over the magicians and the astrologers,
but specifically some translations of the Bible literally use the word.
He's the chief magi in ancient Babylon 600 years before, okay.
So Daniel gets set up as the primary Bible teacher in Babylon.
The back half of Daniel are all these prophecies about a coming Messiah someday.
This is amazing.
All right.
So all we know is Daniel spends the rest of his life teaching these magi in Babylon about a coming Messiah.
And here's what, you can just imagine this.
He's in his classroom.
Here's what the Bible says that someday he's going to be in Bethlehem.
And the Bible says that he's teaching about all these problems.
All right.
All right.
So then he dies in the book of Daniel's over.
So then you fast forward to Matthew chapter two and these magi come from the east.
All right.
Well, the ancient Babylonian empire, modern day Iraq, which just so happens to be due east of Nazareth where they come to visit Jesus.
These dudes, these magi, here's who I think they are.
I think they are the direct descendants of these magi from Babylon that Daniel taught the Bible to.
These dudes, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, grandfather bent their knee to the Lordship of Jesus.
They believed the prophecies from the Bible and they handed it down to their children and their children's children's children's children for 600 years.
So that when Jesus is born and they start hearing these little rumblings about a king that's born in Bethlehem, they're like, man,
my papa told me someday this was going to happen and they were Bible believing men and so they
travel all these miles because they believe these prophecies and they show up and remember it says
they bring three gifts frankincense mur and gold and dude there is a little part of me that wonders
if these guys kept the gold that the Babylonian empire plundered from the temple and they knew that the
boy that was going to be born as Lord was actually God. And they essentially come back to say,
we came to bring your gold back. Wow. And these dudes are the direct descendants of those dudes,
I think. I think that's a possibility. Daniel would have taught them numbers 2417 that says,
a star shall come out of Jacob and a scepter shall rise out of Israel. And they would have been able
to recognize that star and be like, I think that's the star. We need to go this way. And then
they saw their king.
Bro, it's amazing.
We can keep going.
There's so much.
There's so much.
Yeah, and because the lamb was slain, Pastor Josh, that means that we don't have to fear.
Fear not.
That means that we...
Fear not, for our bring you good news of great joy.
That was the sermon this week.
Fear not, man, the elimination of our fear.
And so here's my question, because I want to make it practical, because this is amazing,
and I love this, we could keep going with this.
But when a Bible says fear not, it doesn't say it as a suggestion.
it says it as a command.
It's over and over, over, like all throughout hundreds of times.
Some people say it's 365 times, Fear Not.
I read 366 this week, so you can throw in leap yourself.
Yeah, you can, I guess, yeah, depending on the translation, I'm assuming,
and what language you read it in?
Paul's like, yeah, that's right.
Paul's like, yes, right, you better make that comment.
Fear not is not a suggestion.
It is a command.
God is telling us, hey, don't fear.
How do you do this?
If somebody's listening to me like, wow, that sounds just not realistic.
How do you do this?
In fact, one of my favorite quotes, G. K. Chesterton said,
Jesus promises disciples three things that they would be completely fearless, absurdly happy, and in constant trouble.
So somebody might be asking, in the midst of my trouble, how can I not be fearing?
How do you do it as a Christian?
Well, first of all, go listen to sermon because I was like that was, I will say, man,
if you're gonna boil it down to one thing.
So there's a reason that the word of God
was written down for us
and that we can wake up in the morning
and this morning my Bible reading
was Second Corinthians one through four.
And there's a reason God gave that to us.
Here's what I would say man is,
first of all, we are commanded,
I wanna just reemphasize this,
we are commanded to be fearless people.
A Christian is somebody who should have only
one controlling fear of the fear of God.
And we talked about this during the sermon.
Man, a lot of people,
they're gripped by fear of man because they do not have a fear of God. And when you live in a fear of God,
it eliminates fear of man. What I would say, man is, and I love no what you, your thoughts on this, Paul.
What I would say is you can't control what you feel, but you can't control what you think about,
which is why the Bible is constantly like, hey man, it gives us a command, take every thought captive and
make it obedient to Christ. So here's the example I would use.
I had a mentor one time who he said, man, Josh, whenever God gives you a promise and he like personalizes something in your life, he said, make it the wallpaper of your life.
Memorize it, meditate on it, think about it over and over again. I won't do it again.
I've talked about it on this podcast when I had the little season of the anxiety attacks.
I literally just like listed promises and memorized them made it the wallpaper of my life.
So here's what I would say to a Christian that is like,
you know, we get, they're full of anxiety or fear is, here's the analogy I'd use. So it's like
last week on X, Elon and those guys, did you guys see where they, they made the country of origin
visible on all the X accounts? That's right. Okay, so this is really, I actually screenshoted
like dozens of these. This is really interesting. There were all these like huge, I'm going
somewhere with this, these huge accounts, like with hundreds of thousands of
who have been like tweeting things to stir up fear and division in America.
Like fear and division, fear and division, fear and division, fear and division.
And these accounts are like posing as American citizens or prominent leaders.
And then they like, they made the country of origin visible.
And it was like 90% of them were like Bangladesh, Pakistan.
India.
Like tons of from India.
I didn't see any El Salvador.
Thank God.
That's right.
Hey man, same team.
They're not.
There you go.
Same team.
So dude, so here's the example is there's all these accounts that were putting thoughts out into the world that you thought were on our team, but they were actually working for the enemy.
And they were stoking fear and division, fear and division, fear and division.
When the Bible commands Christians to quote, take every thought captive and make it obedient to Christ,
to Christ, what is saying is every thought that we have, then you need to pause, put that
thought in like a cross-examination chair and ask the question, who sent you and what kingdom
are you coming from?
You need to evaluate.
Who sent this thought?
Because there's a lot of thoughts that you have that you might think are from you, or
you might even think are from God, but actually their nation of origin is from the kingdom
of darkness.
Satan is an accuser and he's the father of lies.
And so, man, when you're thinking things like,
man, God hates me or I'll never be happy again
or, you know, I've messed up and there's no hope
or my family will never be reconciled,
what that stuff will do is it'll stir up fear in your heart.
And what you've got to do is like, you got to, okay,
let me sit that thought down for a second
and ask the question, what's your country of origin?
Do you come from heaven?
Is that Jesus Christ?
You know?
That's good.
And when you do that again, it's like you can't control how you feel, but you control what you think about and make sure that the thoughts you're thinking are from the father. That's good.
Agree, agree, disagree, additional comments. I agree. I heard this from Pastor Mark Driscoe. He, he, this is helpful to me. Because once you start thinking about if you are feeling fear, the way you override that fear is through your faith. And so this is what I found helpful. He said, fear looks out, faith looks up. And so if you're looking out, torture,
problems, you're going to get fear, but faith does not look out, it looks up. Fear listens to the
world. Faith listens to the word. The more your attention and your focus goes to the world,
bad news, whatever's going out out there, the more fear you'll have. The more attention and focus
goes into the word of God, the more faith you have. Fear causes people to stop living. It paralyzes
you. A lot of people, especially in this new generation as well, they're paralyzed because of fear.
Faith causes people to start living. Faith is active, obedience.
is what is the word of God say?
Let me put it in practice right now.
This is why we do the podcast.
We live free.
We don't just talk free.
We want you to apply whatever we are having, whatever conversation we're having.
And fear keeps changing your mind.
Faith settles your mind.
Even when things are not well, you can say, man, God is with me, and I have faith that he is.
And he said, don't fear.
I can trust him.
It is well.
Amen.
I think it was a Watchman Nie, a Christian from, I believe the 1900s from China.
He talked first about the idea if you've got facts, faith in.
feelings. The proper order is what I just said is what are the facts. I want to place my faith
my mind on the facts. And then after that, the feelings will catch up. Now, that doesn't mean
they're always going to be there. Sometimes you're still going to feel afraid. But when you do,
you don't look back at your feelings. You look forward with your faith to the facts that are still
true regardless of my feelings. But what so many Christians do is they change the order.
They put feelings first. They put their faith in their feelings and then say that must be the facts.
That's right. They say, oh, however I'm feeling, that must be true.
And so now I'm going to feel afraid.
Whereas hey, you actually might still feel a feeling of fear.
It's a feeling.
When you feel it, you have to remind yourself of what is true.
That God said, I will never leave you or forsake you.
That greater he is he who is in you than he who is in the world.
You've got to choose, though, to your point to set your mind on those facts, even if you're not feeling like they're true.
It doesn't matter what you're feeling.
Put your faith in the facts, not in your feelings.
That's right.
Amen.
Or God did not give you a spirit of fear, but of power, love.
and self-discipline. Amen. Amen.
Well, hey guys, one of the reasons we are intentional in creating these kind of podcast episodes
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Hey, I want to switch gears a little bit.
We don't.
We're talking Santa.
We talking Book of Enoch.
Where are we going next, man?
We got live.
A couple episodes ago, we talked about UFOs.
And so I want to make sure that we follow up.
We had some a decent amount of comments.
Bro, can we show those?
Yeah, we got some comments of people asking about one particular topic that I want to bring up.
So this is somebody saying, the book of Enoch makes it clear that demons are actually the disembodied Nephilim.
And they keep going about fallen angels.
There's another one over there, Trinity.
Oh, I'm so glad for somebody to confirm this about angels.
I came to this conclusion after reading the book of Enoch.
Enoch.
Bro, Book of Enoch.
Book of Enoch.
And then there's another one here.
I'm really curious if you guys have dived into the book of Enoch and what your thoughts
are in it.
So I want to, you know, and I got some emails as well.
There's no more.
Enoch describes demons as the despirits of the giants, part angels, part humans because
of that they cannot leave the earth.
They hated us and they were alive and they hate us now.
By the way, we need to do an episode on the Nephlem at some point.
That's right.
That's coming soon.
We'll get there.
But I want to ask, I want to bring this conversation because people are, you know,
some of you are like, the book of Enoch.
I don't remember reading that one.
Joe Rogan mentioned it?
That's right.
He did.
And we actually have a clip.
I want to show it.
You got that clip?
So, Tranny, you got...
So, let me say this.
So, yeah, here's why we're going to talk about this, and I'm going to leave this to the chat, G. Palti.
It's like, people are on a huge Book of Enoch kick lately.
Yes, they are.
So you got all these comments.
But then this week, you even had Rogan going viral talking Book of Enoch.
You want to show it?
Yeah.
Tranny, let's go.
Okay.
Rep Luna.
You know, she came on my podcast, too, and she...
She was telling me some stuff that was just like mind-blowing.
And she really got me to read the book of Enoch.
She's like, you got to read that.
So you have the Ethiopian Orthodox text, which has, I think, 88 books of the Bible in total.
But in the Ethiopian Orthodox text, it's basically kind of like a mainline OG version of the Bible.
And then sometime in the fourth century, there was actually a group that came together and they removed certain books.
and the story goes that Revelations actually had replaced Enoch.
And so it's interesting because when you're looking kind of full circle,
you know, you hear the stuff that some of these people are talking about,
and then you see and you read the book of Enoch, which is a wild read, okay?
And then you look at kind of what our modern day description is of what angels and entities are
versus what Enoch was seeing and reporting in his language and ability at that time.
I just, I think that there's a lot that brings you to then ask the question,
well, why would they remove this information?
If it's truly, you know, written and in part of the oldest Bible in the world, why would they then take it out?
Then that could have easily been attached to the religious canon.
You tell me when I cut this.
Some rabbis disagreed with it because it didn't vibe with the Torah.
So like, let's chuck that one out.
But it's in the same lump of Dead Sea Scrolls.
They have the Book of Isaiah, which is really fascinating because Wes Huff when he was on my podcast, explained to me that the Book of Isaiah and that they found in the Dead Sea Scrolls is verbatim.
the same as the book of Isaiah
that was a thousand years more recent.
That's good.
All right, Paul Cunningham.
Paul is our resident book of Enoch scholar.
By the way, you know the episode's going to be good
when you got like four big, many books.
I've got a Hebrew Bible, a Greek New Testament,
a Catholic Bible, and left behind.
All the essentials.
All right, so Paul Cunningham, I have two questions.
Number one, why when we talked about aliens
did everyone start mentioning the book of Enoch?
and then number two
what's what's up with the book of
Enoch is this something they just cut
out of the Bible because to protect the
aliens and then number three what the heck is the
book of Enoch
so many
things there. In terms of aliens
probably Rogan goes on in that clip to talk
almost connect the idea of
what's called the Watchers which is a term used in the
book of Enoch for angels
or the spiritual watchers is used one
time in the old testament. It's actually used two or three times
in Daniel so it's a book it's a
that is also used in Daniel for angels or spiritual beings that we often call angels.
And so he goes on and basically says, oh, maybe this was aliens coming and basically
creating mankind or something like that.
Probably the reason that most people, when we did that episode, referenced it, is because
we talked a lot about angels and about demons.
And the book of Enoch was a writing that was really compiled between the third century
and the first century BC over a period of time.
And a lot of its emphasis is on angels.
demons and their origins, that there were multiple schools of thought about angels in ancient Judaism.
There was not one school of thought. There was multiple schools of thought. And basically,
this was this schools of thought of way of saying, hey, this is what actually happened. This was
some of their origins. And they ascribed it to Enoch, who was the great grandfather of Noah.
And there's actually this. So wait, I just want to pause. Go ahead. So they were claiming the book
was written by Enoch, the grandfather of Moses. Yes.
even though it was written in the first through the third century BC.
That's exactly right.
So this is called pseudipographical writings,
which literally means false writing.
And so think of it today.
When we want to plagiarize today,
we'll put our name on someone else's writing
so that it can have more credibility and authority and validity.
And this day,
they would put someone else's name
who had credibility and authority on their writing
and say that this was actually from Enoch,
who was alive a long time ago, and this is his testimony.
And so, therefore, we should hold it to be true.
But it's actually not.
That's why there's a little bit of a stretch, but I actually brought Left Behind.
Yeah, you did.
I brought, I'd be honest, half-priced books, thank you for having this in stock.
I do not own this book.
Looks like you've been highlighting and this is like your real copy.
I see a lot of.
It's just a signed copy.
Yeah.
And so here's the thing with this is what left behind is, for those who don't know,
is written about 30 years ago by Tim Le Hay and Jerry Jenkins,
and they're talking about what could happen in the future.
But it's a fiction book.
It's like fan fiction of what could happen in the future of Revelation happened today,
kind of a thing.
But I want us to imagine for a second if it was written now or even like a thousand years in the future,
instead of having their names on it,
all of a sudden it had like the Apostle John or James or things like that
and saying, oh, no, see, this is legit.
This really did happen.
And so whereas that would be more about what could happen in the future.
future, people are falsely ascribing Enoch to themselves to say, here's what we believe happened
in the past and authoritatively tried to be saying this is what happened in the past.
But it's only one school of thought.
Now, a few things here.
One is, honestly, when I watched that video in that, I forget what her name was when she
began speaking, I literally, while we're nerding out, I'm going to just kind of go to Star
Star Wars right now because there's this line in Star Wars from Luke Skywalker where after
Kylo Ren kind of goes off, Luke looks at him and says, amazing.
every word that you just said was wrong.
And so when I watched that, I feel like Paul looks at me like that sometimes.
Paul has that out of reason.
I was like, where do I even, where do I even begin?
And so with this, a lot of, a lot of people nowadays think, oh, the book of Enoch is this ancient
book and it actually tells us the truth.
And it was once in the Bible and it's banned from the Bible.
And that's simply not true.
So I've got some different Bibles with me up here.
I've got a Hebrew English Bible.
The book of Enoch has never been in the Hebrew Bible.
Ever.
Ever.
It was never in there, never taken out because it's never in there to begin with.
But she said, hey, it was.
It was.
And some rabbis just kicked it out because it didn't drive with doctrine.
I'm going to get how that happened and why that I'm,
because it's also attributed to this weird false beliefs,
although I think I know how it developed.
But I'll give to that in just a second.
So I've got a Greek New Testament.
Let's say we combined a Greek O Testament.
Testament often called the Septuagint with this. Here's the thing, you'll not find the book of
Enoch in here ever. It was never in the Septuagint, which means that not only Hebraic Jews,
but also Hellenistic Greek Jews, never believed it was a part of the Bible, ever. I've got a Catholic
Bible with me. Now, if you open a Catholic Bible, it actually does have more books than the Bible
that Protestants use, called the Apocrypha. What's interesting is, the book of Enoch.
By the way, we hit that on a previous podcast. You should go listen to it. We should stick that in the show
notes. Yeah. If you want to go, if you want to go back and listen, why are there some books in
the Catholic Bible that are not in a Protestant Bible link in the show notes? That's important.
All right, sorry, go ahead. You're good. So in the Catholic Bible, you've got books that are
often referred to as the apocrypha. So for example, I've got second macabees open. But if you
look through it, you will not find the book of Enoch and it was never there. So literally,
in every canon list and every Bible that we have, except for one, it was never in. And so therefore
was never taken away. So, you know, it was never taken away. So, you know,
Even I laugh sometimes when we use the idea of, oh, it was banned from the Bible.
It was there.
It was like, well, if by banned you mean like, and this is true, Alexander Hamilton wanted the president to actually serve a lifetime, say for a lifetime.
And you're like, they banned him from the Constitution.
I'm like, well, if you mean by that that he was in there and then they decided they didn't like it and took it out later, no.
But if you mean that they consider his opinion and didn't consider it valid, then yeah, in a sense of they decided not to include him.
Now, there was one text that was used, that used the Book of Enoch and that had it in their canon.
That is the Ethiopian Orthodox text.
That's what she mentioned.
And here is a common myth.
It's like, oh, that's the oldest Bible.
And so therefore, that's like the OG, the original.
And then all the others conspired and took it out.
The problem is it simply like not true at all.
Amazing.
Everything you just said is false.
Everything you just said is false.
I award you no points.
May God have mercy on yourself.
We're all now dumber for having listened to you.
You always need a Billy Madison reference.
That's great.
That's great.
That's great.
Don't go and necessarily watch that with your kids.
A hundred percent.
He saw Billy Madison before Tombstone.
I have no idea why, but I know Billy Madison.
And he probably liked it more than Timstone.
No, that's not true.
Anyways, anyways, okay.
That's simply not true.
Here's how I believe this came about.
You do something, you do have something called the Garima Gospels.
I think we actually have a picture of those up here.
This is an Ethiopian text that was written about 500 AD.
It is the first illuminated gospels that we have.
And when I say illuminated, the picture of Hebrew, if you're listening to this instead of watching it,
it has a drawing or a painting in there.
So it is the first illuminated text that we have.
But it is not the first gospel that we have, full gospel.
It is definitely not the first Bible that we have.
In fact, the first you said 500 AD.
That's 500.
So it's like way.
I was going to say.
So we have something.
I think we have actually another picture of Codex of Vaticanus.
It is from the early 300s, which contains almost the entire Old Testament and New Testament in Greek.
And it definitely has all the complete text of the four Gospels.
So almost 200 years before the Greek Gospels, we have this text and we have the complete Gospels.
The first complete Ethiopian Bible we have, by the way, dates between the 14th and 15th centuries.
Holy Moses.
So over a thousand years after this.
And by the way, in the early 400s, we had the Latin Vulgate, which has the complete Bible as we know it.
Again, that's almost a thousand years before that as well.
So I think what happened was is people somehow took this idea that it was the first illuminated gospels.
And then they started just saying, oh, this is the oldest thing we have when that's simply not the case.
Not the case.
No one used it.
And so real quick, can I just explain by no one like Dovincentres and used it.
And so, and then I'll get to a common objection.
I think that maybe even someone put in there in a comment of a wait a second.
and one of the books of the New Testament refers to the book.
Yeah, I got some questions for you, but, yeah.
And it does.
Is that Jude?
That's Jude, that's Jude.
Jude quotes it when it's doing the Janice and Jambras thing?
Well, and it specifically, he talks about Enoch, the seventh from Adam, of how he prophesied,
and he talks about that kind of stuff.
I'm sorry, you go ahead.
No, you're good, you're good.
So why would none of these people, including in, let's just say this again, no Hebrew Jew,
no Hellenistic Jew and no other Christian except for the Ethiopian Orthodox Church?
Why did none of them include it?
Two big reasons.
Number one,
as we earlier said, it's a pseudopacrophicrapher work.
It's a falsely attributed work.
And so big for both the Old Testament and New Testament
is they wanted these writings to be as close
to the events as possible
and written by authorized prophets in the Old Testament,
or sages or kings, people like David, Moses,
all the prophets of the Old Testament.
In the New Testament, it had to be as close to the apostles,
specifically written by an apostle
or one associated with an apostle.
And in the same way,
I'll just put this one the same way that we would not take left behind and put it on par with the book of revelation.
By the way, that whole thing that she said, probably not.
The Ethiopian text has the book of revelation.
So I literally have no idea what she's even talking about.
Yeah, because she says it, yeah, she said in the clip, they replaced it.
And if you go to, because there's actually 81 books in the Ethiopian, not 88, if you go there, they're both there.
So again, I just like, when she kept going to say, I have no idea what you're talking about.
Anyways, I'm sorry.
I'm getting kind of, getting kind of fire.
up and taken away here. So in the same way that we would in no way read this thousands of years
from the time of the apostles and say, well, hey, if it had a name of an apostle on there,
then it must be true. And in fact, we know, no, it's too far removed from the original. It's the
same thing. It was too far removed. They didn't hold it as authoritative. The second thing
is that because some of the things in the book of Enoch actually contradict what we have
in authoritative scripture. One thing, for example, is that in scripture, what we see is that the
angels fell before, before the world was created. Whereas what's happening in one place in the book
of Enoch is you have in Genesis 6, it says, when man began to multiply in the face of the earth,
and if the land and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of man
were attractive, and they took them as their wives that they chose. So that's the Nephilim. That's the
Nephilim. Some Jews, which including the people who wrote the book of Enoch, would say,
hey, these were fallen angels who slept with women and then had basically giants that we call
the Nephilim, that then this is when
more angels fell. So basically it's like, well, hey, we see in scripture and then they
fell before the creation. The book of Vienna can say, no, others fell after
creation. It doesn't jive. So that's just a few reasons, a few reasons
why. Now, some may point out, like, well, what a second, the book of Jude
refers to it. So if it refers to it, then surely then it's inspired and it's also
the word of God. You want to look at it up real fast forward. I do. I want to see the exact verse.
It doesn't quote it to clarify that.
Oh, it?
It quotes it.
I think it does.
Okay.
It quotes it.
It quotes it.
It quotes it.
It quotes it.
Yeah, it quotes it pretty directly.
Here's how like to say it.
Here's how like to say about this.
We have to make a big distinction between what is inspired and what is true.
If something is the inspired of Word of God, it is necessarily true because it was inspired by God.
If something is true, that does not necessarily mean that it was inspired.
So anything that is inspired is true.
That's good, Paul.
But something that is true is not necessarily inspired or mean that the thing that it came from is completely inspired.
So let's actually leave the book of Enic and give my favorite example from the New Testament of this.
Because they would often quote other works of people.
And my favorite one is from a guy named Epimene, can I talk to today?
Epaminities.
Act 17. Is that where you're gone?
Act 17.
Actually, I was going to go to Titus where Paul calls him a prophet.
And he says that he tells this basically the thing of all Cretans are liars.
Titus is on the island of Crete
And so Paul is like, this is true.
The issue of that is that that is in the context of the same poem
that actually quotes in Acts 17
that is a hymn and praise of Zeus.
So my question is, does this mean that Paul actually believes Zeus exists
and that we should worship him alongside Jesus and stuff like that?
No, of course not.
What he's doing there is he's taking a work that they are familiar with
and that they would understand and saying,
hey, and this specific thing, this is true.
And he's trying to connect with them.
I believe it's the same thing in the book of Jude,
where Jude is taking something that early Jews would have been aware of
and saying that, hey, this specific thing is true
and is representative of the truth without the entire book of Enok
having to be true as well.
So here's the verse.
It's Jude, Zion 1 chapter in Jude.
Jude 14, 15 is a quotation of 1st Enoch 1-9.
So it says,
it was also about these
that Enoch the seventh from Adam
prophesied saying,
Behold the Lord comes with 10,000s of his holy ones
to execute judgment on all
and to convict all the ungodly
of their deeds of ungodliness
that they have committed in such an ungodly way
and of all the harsh things
that ungodly sinners have spoken against him.
And that's apparently a quote of first Enoch,
like I said, one nine.
But you're saying,
just because the Bible references this work
doesn't mean the Bible
is affirming the entire.
work or that the entire work is inspired. Again, in the same way that Paul is in no way saying
epaminities is an inspired author and that everything he says is true. He's simply taking a truth
in there and using it for his context and for his purposes. So what's, I'm curious because we didn't
talk about that. So it's like, what's the warning that you, so for people who were in the comments.
This is good. And they were like, hey man, it seems like when y'all are talking about angels and demons,
you know, manifesting as things that people are confusing for, you know, alien activity.
and people are, you know, using the book of Enoch as like a legitimization for that.
I kind of like legitimate for them to do that.
What's a warning you would give?
Before you go there, because what they're saying is basically like, here's my Bible
and here's the book of Enoch.
It's basically like the same authority.
That's what a lot of people were saying, actually.
And even like with this, I think that's important even as an exact, because some people
like, wait a second.
Even some early Jews did have it because even like Joe Rogan said in that one clip,
and I forgot to address this earlier, and this will lead into a response,
is we'll say, well, wait a second, that early Cuman community had like Isaiah, and they also had the book of Enix, which was true.
But they didn't hold them on par with each other.
Yeah, and to clarify, Paul, because you're using terms here, for people that don't know, so Joe Rogan said that in the Dead Sea Scrolls, which is the earliest manuscripts found of the Bible of the Bible that in other, that in other, that we are familiar with, like the book of Isaiah, they also found the book of Enoch.
So he's saying, well, it was kind of all together.
So why is the Bible of the Bible?
But then this one's not.
Exactly.
And so this was an early Jewish community, like kind of like a sect that lived out in the middle of nowhere.
It was a community.
And they would collect these scrolls.
And yeah, they wore together.
But here's the key distinction.
They did not hold them equally.
And so we know that both by how they refer to the different things and how they talk about them.
But also there's something called Pescher style commentary, which is where they would take actual books that we know as at the Old Testament.
And they would make comments on them to try to explain, hey, this is how.
this is being fulfilled in our day. Guess what does not have that? The Book of Enoch.
Oh, interesting. So you can, you can even tell, was it at the Aseans? Yeah, there's Essine community.
And so, like, with that, they have it all over the Torah because the Torah was accepted as the
authoritative text. Because they were essentially writing commentary. Yes, exactly. Almost like a study
Bible. Exactly. They would take the verse. And then, and then you're saying they did not do that
from Book of Enoch. And that very clearly indicates, these dudes did not consider that.
And so actually using like this table as an example right here is like imagine like I die in a thousand or two thousand years from now they find my library. And in that library they find all my Bibles and then they find left behind. By the way, you will not find that because I'm going to probably return this after the show is over. Sorry, I have priced. You're getting new money back. But anyways, I'm getting my money back.
You can donate it too. I get three bucks. They'll pay you through. I have comments, but I don't want to get angry emails. Anyways, I'm at Nicolai Carpathware on the YouTube video.
and we will send you.
That's hard to spell, bro.
But anyways, imagine if they said, oh, Paul must have held all of these in equal esteem to each other.
Because they were all in the bookshelf together.
It's just, guys, it's silly.
It's silly.
So in terms of some warnings I'd guess.
And before that Paul, it's true to that in the Dezzi Scrolls, it's not just like the Bible.
There were other writings.
Oh, yeah.
There's other writers.
And there are a bunch of different things.
So it was a whole library.
And even that connects to like, well, why did the Ethiopian church, like, accept all these?
best we can guess is that in the 4th century missionaries did come to share the gospel with them.
And then also there was an Ethiopian Jewish community there that had some of these writings,
including the book of Enoch as well.
So our best guess is basically around the same time that the canon was being received and finalized
in terms of these are the writings that are authoritatively from God.
The Ethiopians had all these different things.
They're like, oh, we'll just take them all.
It's basically the easiest and fastest way to explain that.
So now warnings for sure.
Yeah.
So a few warnings.
Number one, if you're hearing this like, well, that's nice,
but I don't care, I'm still going to accept as authoritative.
My question be, by what criteria?
So in other words, if you think, hey, even though every Jewish community,
except for, and even like you said, Kumran didn't accept at the same level,
even though every Jewish community did not hold it the same level as the Bible,
and even though with the exception of one,
every Christian community in the world at that time rejected it.
They did not include it.
It was never in the Bible.
They simply rejected and not include it.
If you reject their criteria, okay, so what is your criteria?
What is it that you're going to be saying that this is the ground of
truth because it's just thinking like what we believe about God and the world God has made really
matters.
There is a real God who wants to be known for who he really is and loved and worship for who
he really is.
And he wants us to know about the world he really created and how he really created it.
And so what is your criteria?
And my sense is this actually lead in a few minutes to the next video because you'll see
some elements of this too, is that if it's simply you're choosing it based on what you like
and don't like, well, your God's going to become a lot like you.
Yeah, that's right.
And he's going to be you.
He's going to be a figment of your imagination instead of the real God.
So if you want to reject it, I'd say, hey, what is your criteria?
Number two, I'd say this.
And I see this, I've always seen this, but I will say it's increasing danger I do see,
is that there is an obsession with things that we can't know to the neglect of knowing the thing
that we can't know.
Oh, that's very smart.
Yes.
In Deuteronomy 29, it says that the hidden things belong to the Lord,
but the revealed things belong to us and to our children so that we could basically do them
practice them kind of a thing. And so, man, it's just so interesting that means that people will
spend so much energy trying to speculate on things we will never know this side of heaven and may
never even know on the other side of heaven. And yet we neglect to know the God that we can know
and who is infinitely noble. The way I like to think of it is like imagine if explores all of a sudden
stumbled upon this continent that is vast and that just so much to see and explore. And then they just
decided to stay on the shore. That's how so many Christians treat God. That's right.
Like people will want to dive into these things that we can never know when there is a God
through his word that we can know. Which by the way, that is like a temptation in every age.
That's why in the New Testament, Paul is constantly, you have that in your notes.
Paul is constantly warning. And I just want to say this for church members and Christians in
general, like conspiratorial thinking and let me go down the rabbit hole. And,
that kind of thing. Like we're literally specifically warned in the New Testament. He says,
stop devoting yourselves to myths and endless genealogies. And what he's doing is he's pointing
back to the same principle from Deuteronomy. He's like, no man, there's some stuff that the
Lord has locked up. You're not going to know this side of heaven. Quit focusing your mental
energy on the things that are hidden. Yeah. And give your mental energy to the things that have
been revealed. What has God clearly revealed to us in the scriptures? That's where your mental energy
needs to be. Not trying to figure out if the watchers are aliens.
Exactly. I'll read this text and I'll say something to us,
and I'll say to Carlos, who we'll come back around and we come to the Nephleam and I'll have to share it again,
but this is actually, you're just quoting 1 Timothy 1.
Or it talks about don't devote yourselves to myths and endless, endless genealogies which promote speculations rather than the stewardship from God that is by faith.
And he goes on a few verses later, says certain persons by swerving from these have wandered away into what vain discussion?
And so let me even ask it like this, because this was revealed like to the Nephilim and every day.
thing. If you knew who the Nephilim were today, what would it change about your relationship with
Jesus tomorrow? That's a great question. That's good. That's a good question. And I would also,
by the way, you can substitute any other thing that people endlessly debate about that we can never know
that ultimately is not the core of our faith. And yet this is the thing we become obsessed over.
And frankly, it's funny because people are using this to talk about demons. If I was a demon, I would
love for you to endlessly obsess over things that you can never know for sure instead of the God that
It was you, that created you to know him for sure.
So, yeah, good thoughts.
Speaking of doing that kind of dovetails in this guy.
Absolutely.
So speaking of how do we actually get the Bible,
there is a video that we're going to be reacting to.
Can I set this up?
All right, dude.
I, no joke.
I want to talk about this because no joke,
at least 20 church members sent me this thing.
And it's 15 million views just on Instagram.
It had at least that many on YouTube.
and if it felt like for like two weeks, like every Christian was like, oh no, what do I think about this?
But then honestly, I watched it and I had the Billy Madison response.
Yeah, I award you no points.
May God have mercy on yourself.
We're all dumber.
And I don't mean to like dunk on a guy, but I kind of do.
Okay.
So here's what this.
By the way, do you know who this guy is before?
I did not.
No.
Okay.
This just went like mega viral.
And if you're a Christian, here's what I want to do this real quick,
you're going to get this stuff constantly thrown at you.
And I mean constantly, because what this dude does here in these like three minutes
is he essentially takes like every gaslighting myth about Christianity
and the origins of the Bible.
And he tosses it all into one bouquet and throws it at you.
So are you all ready?
We're ready.
Also, this is what you're going to hear is basically like textbook,
reconstructing Christianity one-on-one.
Like, that's exactly, like, I've actually, you know, I've been there.
I've read all the books as well, and like everything you'll hear him say is literally like
all the main points for a path towards deconstruction.
But go ahead.
Let's dive in.
Okay, so here we go.
Let's break this down.
Jesus wasn't a Christian.
He was a Jew.
And he didn't come to create a religion.
The Bible, as we know, it didn't even exist when Jesus walked the earth.
Okay, pause.
First of all right.
First of all, I'm already dying.
Okay, let me say a few things.
And then you got to chime in.
First of all, Jesus wasn't a Christian.
He was a Jew.
Okay, first of all, yes, obviously, yes, that's true.
Jesus was a Jew.
But I just want to say, like, what do you mean Jesus wasn't a Christian?
He wasn't a Christian because the word Christian literally means little Christ or follower of Christ.
Newsflash, he can't follow himself.
He would not say, I am mini-me.
He's got a little Christ, he's the big Christ.
Different movie reference there.
All right.
Now, so then he goes on and he says, and again, this is the kind of stuff.
If you're a Christian, you hear it in an Instagram video and this guy has this soothing voice.
You know, oh, he has the backwards hat on.
Obviously, it's very, it's very compelling.
Then he says, and he didn't come to start a new religion.
This is what he says.
Okay.
So I would say, number one, yes, but he did come as the fulfillment of the general.
Jewish religion. This is very important. Matthew 517, Jesus very specifically says, do not think I came to
abolish the law and the prophets. That's the Jewish religion. I've not come to abolish them. I have come
to fulfill them. The other thing I would say, and we'll rapid fire these things, is no, he didn't
come to start a new religion, but he did come to establish a new covenant. In fact, he specifically says,
what is a covenant? That's a big Bible nerd theological word. A covenant is an agreement with God,
between God and man about the way that God is choosing to relate to mankind.
Jesus specifically says, at the last supper, holds up the cup, and he's like, this is the cup
of my blood, this is the new covenant. So yes, Jesus did come to establish a new covenant in a way
that we relate to God. And John 1460 literally says, I am the way, the truth, the life.
Nobody comes to the father except through me. No other religious leader in history of a major
religion has said that. Buddha literally said, do not look to me for salvation. I am not your
final refuge. The Quran literally says Muhammad is only a messenger. No Hindu divinity says they're an
exclusive access to God. Jesus did say that. Therefore, that's like, that's new. That's new.
Yeah. And one thing real fast, we can keep going, although it's going to be hard to honestly go
more than a few seconds and stop. But is that, yeah, there's a bad term of religion. But another term
of religion that sometimes people forget is that it just means basically what are the acceptable
beliefs and practices in association with the specific person.
And so part of, I think, even what this video is going to get over time is like,
oh, you can just believe whatever you want, except Jesus doesn't really allow you to do that,
and he doesn't talk that way.
He literally says, when he's praying to the father about his disciples after he leaves,
he says, he says, sanctify them in truth.
Your word is truth.
And so in other words, it's not what you can believe whatever.
No, there are certain things and beliefs about God that are right, and there are certain things
that are wrong.
So, yeah, just a few thoughts.
But didn't even exist when Jesus walked the earth.
Not when Paul wrote his letters.
Bro.
Not when Matthew Mark Lewis down recorded their accounts.
The Bible was literally compiled hundreds of years later.
Pause.
All right. This is killing me, bro.
Wait, there's a little bit more.
By it by who?
Okay, yeah.
By a piggy.
For political reasons.
By a pet.
Okay, pause.
By pagan.
Okay, so a few things.
This kills me.
Okay, so it says the Bible, as we know it, didn't even exist when Jesus walked the earth.
Well, that's because the New Testament is a recording of the life.
death and resurrection of Jesus, and you can't write it down until after it happens.
So I'm like, yeah, bro, of course.
So I would just say it like this.
Like, hey, Paul, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, they can't read something that they wrote
before they write it.
Yes, exactly.
And also, Jesus had a Bible.
It's called the Old Testament.
Literally, that's why he quotes, quote, the scriptures over and over, and he affirmed
the law and the prophets, Matthew chapter 5.
So, I mean, that's God's word.
Yes.
So here's what you got to understand.
And this is going to become important in the next few seconds this video.
What you have to understand is, okay, here's what Jesus did do.
Jesus specifically prophesied the fact that the New Testament, the New Testament scripture
was going to be written.
So these are the important verses, John 1613.
Jesus said, but he, when he, the Spirit of Truth comes, he will guide you, the apostles
into all truth.
He will not speak on his own.
He will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is yet to come.
He's specifically saying ahead of time, the Spirit is going to author new scriptures just like he did in the Old Testament.
He's saying that there?
You also have this in 2. Peter 3, 15, and 16.
You have already the Apostle Peter during the writing of the New Testament referring to the writings of Paul as the scriptures.
So I just want to pause.
You'll see this like with all the deconstruction guys.
You're going to see this throughout this thing.
what these people are asking you to do is they're asking you to believe that man,
Paul and Peter, who actually knew Jesus, they missed it.
But me, 2025 years later, I figured it out.
And then he makes the assumption that, oh, it all wasn't brought together until 300 years later
by pagan emperor.
We'll get that because that's literally like not true at all.
But with that is also like, like over the next hundred years,
you have church fathers who are quoting the New Testament as Scripture.
So literally, if we just took, and by the way, I think we'll get this assessment,
we've actually also got lists that are given before eventually it has settled on.
But if I just took, for example, like in 180, there's a guy named Iranaeus.
And he doesn't give a list, but he quotes every New Testament book except Philemon,
3rd John, and Jude.
Clement, again, he quotes every New Testament book except Philemon, second, and third, John, James, and Jude.
So if I just took people's citations, they are quoting the things that we now have
as the New Testament.
Like that is the scripture.
And they're quoting it as authoritative scripture,
not as possibilities to be believed.
This is important for listeners
because a lot of people don't know the dates.
So when you're saying Ironaeus 180,
first of all, isn't it went John Polycarp Irenas?
When you had Clement.
You had Clement in there as well,
the very end of the first century.
So wait, I'm talking about the discipleship chain.
Oh, got you got you got, yeah.
And then he disciples Polycar,
polycarp, discipleed ironias?
I believe.
I think that's right.
So you essentially have this guy
was disciplined by a guy
that was disciples by an actual apostle.
And you're saying that was 180 AD.
Yeah.
What a lot of people do is a lot of people put the writing of the book of Revelation
between like 90 and 100, right?
So you've got like within one lifetime.
Yep.
Okay.
So then the other thing he says is he says, I mean, you got it right there.
The Bible was compiled hundreds of years later by a pagan emperor for political reasons.
Chaptee.
Was the Bible compiled by a pagan constant?
hundreds of years later.
He's most likely referring here to Constantine,
and the answer is no.
It's why Shrewitt would say false.
We're trying to get as many...
Battlespar Galactica.
Trying to get as many different random movies
and TV shows and as we can't.
No.
Identity theft is not a joke to him.
I'm going to keep going.
I've got to be careful.
I'm not going to be able to recover.
Oh, yeah.
We're running out of time.
Okay.
So most likely he is referring to the Council of Nicaea
that were actually in the 1700-year
anniversary of this year. The problem with that is that we have accounts of the council of
Nicaea. We have 20 what's called canons or rules that are passed there. And you know what
none of them have to do with? Scripture and what was the New Testament whatsoever is that the
counts of Nicaea was really around the debate about something called Aryanism. And that was,
was, hey, was Jesus an uncreated divine? Like what we think of now, he was the son of God,
uncreated, or was he a created being? Ariens would say he was created, Orthodoxians would say,
No, he was not.
That's Homo Uzias.
Yep, exactly.
And so Constantine called that council.
But it was the bishops who decided, and again, what were they not deciding?
They were not deciding scripture whatsoever.
This is a really, I just want to highlight this,
because if you're a Christian, this kind of stuff you're going to get thrown out of constantly.
There is a persistent myth that Constantine in 325 AD around there.
He just sort of decided the New Testament, again, for political reasons.
literally there's not a scrap of evidence anywhere.
Anywhere.
That the Council of Nicaea or Constantine had.
So it's essentially like, what's your source?
Trust me, bro.
And in fact, like, well, like literally the first council that adopted like officially,
although in 367, again, Mattanasius released this festal letter and he proclaimed what we
can what we now know as the New Testament, the 27 books, as the New Testament scripture.
But it's the signate of Carthage in 397.
You know who wasn't there?
Any emperor.
Yeah.
Constantine had already been dead for a good amount of decades and no emperor was there.
In fact, it's a little quick thing.
While Constantine called the council at Nicaea and he did enforce it, what's interesting
is his son actually then tried to enforce Arianism become the official doctrine.
So really the only time in those first, like that time frame that an emperor tried to force
doctrine on people, it was trying to force false doctrine.
Not now that we have Christian doctrine.
So it's actually the opposite of what everyone always says.
Let's keep going.
Let's keep going.
That should tell you something.
Now, does that mean we throw the Bible out?
No, I love the Bible.
I read the Bible every day.
It's the most important book of my life.
But it does mean we have to stop worshipping it like it's God and be honest with ourselves.
And start listening to the truth that is behind it.
And if you doubt me, do your own research.
The Bible was literally voted by a bunch of politicians and bishops in a room deciding what made the cut and what didn't.
I made it up.
He just made it up?
Centuries after the first.
fact. That's like building your spiritual life around the minutes of a corporate board meeting.
Okay, pause. So first of all, we've already established, it's completely like it's literally just
an out of thin air fabrication. Yeah. Your research. It's good advice. That's what he said. He said,
do your research. I'm like, you should have done that. That's great advice. Yeah. So let me just say,
so he said, we have to stop worshipping it like is God. Hey, first of all, true. Yeah. Let me just say that's true.
Yeah. And just so you know, just because you believe the Bible doesn't mean you worship the Bible.
That's another false dichotomy there. That's right. Now, should we treat the Bible
as if every word of it is true? Yes, because God says every word of it is true. In fact,
Jesus says every word of it is true. Not a jot nor titul of the law will pass away until
heaven or earth pass away. I will just say, one thing he's saying there is this true, because I want
to acknowledge that. We should not, that there actually is a way, Jesus says, to elevate the
scriptures above the person to whom they point. In fact, Jesus says this is what the Pharisees did that was
wrong. He specifically says this to the Pharisees in John 5. He says, you search the scriptures because
you think that in them you have eternal life. It is they that bear witness about me. So he's saying,
bro, the whole point of the scriptures is for you to look through them to have a relationship with
me. Fun little side note, that's why Martin Luther, Protestant reformer, he called the scriptures
the swaddling clothes of Christ. He was like, man, it's inside of these things that you develop a
relationship with Jesus. Now, the one thing that I will say is really subtle. You're going to,
you see this in what he just said, and you're going to see it in the next few seconds in what he says.
Really subtle what he's doing is he's saying, hey man, you need to look past the Bible to like
what's behind it. Now, here's what's going on. If you get down underneath everything,
what he's doing is he's essentially going, hey, Carlos, you need to trust yourself to be inspired
to evaluate the Bible instead of just trusting the Bible to be, is inspired so that it can evaluate you.
That's really what he's doing.
A lot of times theologians, they'll call it, they call it spot inspiration.
And they'll say, man, some people believe that the Bible's inspired in spots.
And they also just so happen to believe that they're inspired to spot the spots.
Yep.
There you go.
It's basically, it's the same thing as before is I'm picking what I like.
That's right.
And what I end up as a God a lot like me.
And with that, he makes this other thing.
this is like, oh, there were other texts. What's interesting is all those other texts,
because there were other, quote-unquote, gospels written. Do you know what they all have in common?
They attributed themselves to who? An apostle. So even like the criteria was that it had to come
from an apostle to be authoritative. So even the false gospels, we call them false. People
think they're true. Although I want to actually encourage you to go read them. People say that most of them
have never actually read them. And if you go read them, they're really weird. And you would not want to
believe what it actually says about Jesus. Just going to say.
that you can go ready for yourself. But what I was going to say, so then I'd come back to,
so then what is your criteria? Like if we believe that we're worshiping and believing in
a true historical person with events that either happened or they didn't, we would probably
want to get as close to those events into the eyewitnesses of those events as possible.
Who or who? The apostles.
We'll keep going. All right, let's give you on.
And Jesus never said, read my book, because the Bible didn't exist when Jesus was here.
He said follow me.
His God.
Pause.
Let me just.
She said, never read my book.
He said, follow me.
Here's what I want to go.
Well, then how do you figure out how to follow him?
You read the book.
Yeah.
But there's no other way to figure out to follow him.
You said, the basis, you said, the basis is implying the Bible has been kind of corrupted
because it was put together by politicians and we can't completely trust it.
Well, how can I know that I can trust the verse that says, follow me?
Yeah, there you go.
There it is.
And he also said, have you not read?
Have you not read?
Sounds like he wants us to read it.
He said the scripture.
cannot be broken. All the things. All right. Let's keep going.
The gospel was not about denominations and it wasn't about brick and mortar churches.
He was talking about the church in the heart of men, those in pursuit of the truth,
not the dogmas of men. And it's important to note that God did not write a single page in the Bible.
The words came through men, deeply flawed men. POS. Okay, bro, this is the big deal right here.
So let me riff on this for a second. He said, it is important to note. God did not.
write a single page of the Bible. It was written by men, deeply flawed men. This is the most
important thing. All right, Trinity, will you toss that diagram up here? All right. So this is what
Satan does in every generation, starting in Genesis chapter one, is God did not surely say.
That's what he always is doing. He's trying to undermine the authority of the Word of God, always.
What Christians have to have is a solid rock underneath their feet, like, hey, bro, you can trust
the Bible. Okay. So like here, I'm going to give you one. I just can give you one thing to help
here. Okay, here's what you're looking at right here. It's like one of my favorite diagrams.
That is a diagram of every cross-reference in the Bible. So every time that the Bible connects to
directly or indirectly another part of the Bible, okay? So it's, it's vast. All right. Now, what you
got there is you have 63,779 connections from one part of the Bible to another part of the Bible. Now,
Let me just say this, bro.
You look at that thing.
If one person did that, if somebody wrote a book that did that,
everyone in the world would say, masterpiece.
Like greatest author that ever lived.
Nobody's ever done this before.
But that book was not written by one guy.
That book was written down by 40 different men over 1,500 years.
across three continents, Europe, Asia, and Africa,
in three different languages,
Greek Hebrew and Aramaic,
it has one united story,
it has zero contradictions.
Let me just say this.
There is only one answer to how that can happen.
It was written down by men.
It was authored by the living God.
Yes.
So listen to it, when he's just making naked assertions,
not one page of the Bible is written by God,
you're just making a naked assertion
with no evidence, in fact, in the face of all the evidence, and in contradiction to what the Bible
says about itself, where the Bible itself says that it was inspired by God.
Not only that, I mean, all these references in the Old Testament, thus says the Lord.
There are parts of the Bible where God literally says, write these words, and then he speaks,
and then the author, so Exodus 17, write this on a scroll, Jeremiah 30, thus says the Lord,
write in a book, all the words I have spoken to you, Revelation chapter 21, write this down for
these words are faithful and true. I mean, it just keeps going out. Jesus said in the scriptures,
have you not read what God said to you? And it points to scriptures. I mean, it's just, it's all over.
Everywhere, man. All right, let's keep going. Written, rewritten, translated, re-translated.
This is very barred airmen.
Kings, priests, and politicians. And then argued over by 45,000 different Christian denominations
who all swear they're the ones who are right for 2,000 years until it made it into your hands.
If that's not confusing, I don't know what it is.
Okay, pause.
I know I'm pausing a lot, but this is like, bro, Christians need to know, like, this is insane.
So first of all, he does the whole thing, written, translated, rewritten, re-translated, as we all know.
So, like, I want you to know, like, how trustworthy your Bible is.
So this comes from, it's Josh McDowell compiled this.
Will you toss that, toss that, the chart up there?
All right, so here's what you're looking at.
This is, I don't think people.
realize like how trustworthy the text you're holding in your hands is. I don't think people realize
it. So what you're looking at here, and it's worth going over to YouTube if you're not to actually
see this, this is the manuscript evidence of both the level of attestation to ancient
documents and the accuracy of the copies of the documents. Now, dude, we could do a whole podcast
on this. I'm not going to do that. But it's like, you know, when you read in high school about the
writings of Plato, for instance.
Okay.
We have seven ancient copies of Plato,
and the time gap between when he wrote it
and the first copy we found is 1,200 years.
Wow.
You can do this in a bunch of stuff.
Julius Caesar.
We have 10 copies, 10 ancient copies of his writing,
and the time gap between when he wrote it
and the earliest manuscripts we have is 1,000 years.
Aristotle, we have 49 copies.
and the time gap from when he wrote it
to earliest manuscript is 1,400 years.
Okay, then you get to the New Testament.
What you have in the New Testament
is you have, and this is the most conservative estimate,
you have about 6,000 extant ancient copies
of the New Testament,
and they date to within less than 100 years
of the events of the New Testament.
The movie makes it sound.
I was like, oh, it went through all these changes to get into your hands, as if, like,
it had to go through all these different things, like a giant game of telephone,
where literally I've got here, like, I've got the Greek New Testament.
Yeah.
And what I love is at the bottom, you can't see this, but at the bottom, any place where there are
any variations at all, they actually tell you.
So there's nothing to hide.
Nothing's hidden.
Yes, we do have a lot of different translations of the Bible.
And guess what they are all based on, Greek New Testament, and then Hebrew O Testament.
With six, by the way, with 6,000 ancient manuscripts by which to backtest the accuracy.
They verify themselves, that corroborate themselves.
Exactly.
So then, and you got this, you know, if you go back and look at it, the accuracy of the,
when they took the 6,000 early manuscripts, Greek manuscripts in the New Testament, and they backtest
them against each other, the accuracy of the copies exceeds 99.5%.
Yeah.
And then the only little, you know, the only variations, there are things like, was the word the
right there or it's a little stuff has nothing to do with doctrine all right let's
keep going and finish this up real quick now this is something that Christians do not want to
address because it destroys the entire idea that the Bible is flawless and all you
need is this book that mainstream Christianity has turned into something of an
idol and for further context the Old Testament God smiting people left is killed me
right here is not even the same a personality as Jesus in the gospel is telling us to
forgive our enemies we're talking about
two totally different characters.
It's like trying to mix a Metallica concert with a Mr.
Rogers' neighborhood special and calling it one genre or religion.
The God of the Old Testament is not the same God
as the one that Paul wrote about in his letters.
All right, pause, pause.
Bro, that is literally like, did God really say of the Old Testament?
That's basically what he's doing.
Well, that's also called Marcionism.
I was about to say, I heard you got any Marcianism.
That's Marcianism, Patrick.
So that's a, Marcionism is a heresy that essentially says,
he says. Two different gods. Yeah, two different gods, old testament God, new testament God.
I just want to point this out because if you're a Christian, you're going to get that thrown
at you a lot. And this is like, honestly, it's one of the most mind-blowing little deep cuts in the
in the Bible. All right. So what people will do like this guy is they'll point to, he says,
smiting the innocence. Ah, the slaughtering of the innocence. And in the Old Testament, they do
slaughtering of the innocence. And the New Testament, they don't do that. So they're different gods.
I just want to point this out. When it comes to the slaughtering of the innocence in the Bible,
specifically the Old Testament, I have good news and I have bad news, okay?
Good news, good news, there is no such thing as a slaughtering of the innocence in the Old Testament.
Every time you see a quote unquote slaughtering in the Old Testament on behalf of God, it is not genocide, it is sinicide.
There are no innocent people. That's the bad news. There are no innocent people. So here's what's really interesting.
Let's put our theological hats on. Here's our theological hat.
there is actually only one time in the entire Bible that there is a slaughtering of the innocent
it was not in the old testament it was in the new testament and bro listen god did not do it to man
man did it to god when we crucified the son of god on the cross because of the weakness of
our hearts so listen you want to talk about slaughtering the innocence that's in the new
testament not the not the old testament there is a radical continuity between the character of god
in the in the Testaments.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then the correct,
the caricature is that the Old Testament
has judgment and mercy
and then the New Testament
is hugs and kisses.
Actually, like both the Old Testament
and the New Testament,
both have judgment and mercy.
And so, again, and then obviously,
you need to read Revelation as well.
There's a lot of judgment there.
Yeah.
Yeah, the imagery is insane.
Like, when like when people bring this up,
I say, okay, if so,
if Jesus was so different than the God of the Old Testament,
then why didn't Jesus ever rebuke that God?
That's great, Paul.
And why didn't he ever say, oh, no, no, no, no, don't believe that one.
Instead, like he said, again, I've not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it,
that I'm not, not the smallest little thing is going to pass away from those
grave.
Like, he came to fulfill all those things.
And he did things that were only attributed to y'allel.
And he actually said, before Abraham was, I am.
And so actually, you know what Jesus was saying?
I was that one who ordered that.
That's exactly right.
And so when we say all this, I'm kind of like, it just constructs this false narrative.
I'm like, Jesus literally.
like you're apparently holier than Jesus.
So that's all.
All right, let's finish it up. Here we go.
And neither are the same character as Jesus from the four gospels.
Jesus said something really interesting ones.
He said, be like little children.
Kids do not need theological degrees.
They need simple truth.
The gospel was meant to be clear, freeing, and alive,
not locked in denominational arguments and weaponized like the woke left and the
stone casting right.
Because the real gospel, the gospel,
the gospel that Jesus taught
is not about control.
It's about freedom.
So if the Bible is fallible, good.
That means it's human.
And if it's human, then the point was never the pages.
It was the person.
And he still says the same thing today.
Follow me and be free.
Okay, let me just say.
The point was never the pages.
It was the person.
How do you figure out how to follow the person?
You read the pages.
I'm going to end right there.
Yeah, that's good.
I think we're good, man.
I think we did.
Man, we got to talk about Santa next time.
I know.
Wait, you don't want to do it three minutes?
Oh, it is.
You're a call.
I think we save it for next time.
Okay, we'll save it for next time.
So next time, should Christians do Santa Claus?
Good T's here.
Pastor Josh, would you pray for us?
I would love to you.
Father, thank you.
Thank you for your great kindness to us.
Thank you for the bread of your word.
I pray for every man in one.
women that are listening, that they would fall in love of the Word of God and they would feast on it
because man does not live by bread alone, but by everywhere that comes from the mouth of the
Father. Father, I pray that you bless them. I pray that for people who are walking through valleys
of shadows of death this Christmas season, that they would know that you are with them
and that your rod and staff will comfort them. So I commit them to you in the name of the boy who
was born, Lord, and grew up to be crucified for their sins, Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Live free.
Live free, brother.
Thanks for tuning in to Live Free with Pastor Josh Howardton.
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