A Brief History of Passover

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024

Komentáře • 30

  • @TopDollaent
    @TopDollaent Před rokem +1

    i love how our story as a people is told clear as day in the bible down to our color being black like the ground yahawashi skin being described as a black copper toned man with rough hair as woll i don't no how the story getting mixed up with our brother esau being called the chosen when we bought his birth right & receive our father isaac blessing with isaac being a prophet yahawa blessed his words to come to passed so we receive the blessings of the first born esau came out red & hairy we fraternal twins jacob came out dark skin who the jews from the people of judah come from with judah being jacobs son but just know all that god said will come to pass he made a promise to us his real people the true jews hebrew dark skin people isrealites

  • @gabitamiravideos
    @gabitamiravideos Před rokem +1

    Nice work. Not many people know today that Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Breads were once separate.
    I’d only add this, though the feasts were mandated in the Torah, the Seder was not. What was mandated, since the the reforms implemented by the king Josiah, was a pilgrimage to the Temple, and offerings of sacrifices. Scholars date the Seder as an innovation after the destruction of the Second Temple, as a substitute at home for the pilgrimage and sacrifice mandated. This means that according to them Jesus’ last supper would not have been properly a Seder, though it did have to do with the commemoration of the scape of Egypt.
    * You undoubtedly know that most scholars agree that the texts of Deuteronomy were initially composed much later than the other texts of the Torah, probably during the reign of Josiah, when the scrolls of that book were “found” in the Temple.

  • @draxistdraxer5029
    @draxistdraxer5029 Před 3 lety

    Thank you🙏

  • @jperez7893
    @jperez7893 Před rokem

    the last supper was a celebration of the feast of unleavened bread which fell on a Tuesday according to the essene calendar. it is one the earliest documentation of the 2nd temple Passover meal. Jesus died on the Friday of the 14th of Nisan of 33ad according to the jewish calendar

  • @GalaxyOfMoses
    @GalaxyOfMoses Před rokem +1

    Really awesome information! However your pronunciations of haggadah, charoset, and afikomen are....interesting 😅

  • @NicolasGer
    @NicolasGer Před 3 lety

    i’m not gonna change your mind about you being an atheist but what about your thoughts towards the supernatural? like the gifts of God? or angels and the demonic? or how witchcraft powers (that operate through demon powers) copy the powers of God? (that operate through the Holy Ghost)

    • @DJ-uc8mk
      @DJ-uc8mk Před 3 lety

      good question

    • @MidlifeCrisis82
      @MidlifeCrisis82 Před 3 lety +2

      That which we cannot comprehend does not mean it defies the laws of this universe.
      With enough time we should be able to unravel these mysteries. If not us, at least our descendants.

    • @MidlifeCrisis82
      @MidlifeCrisis82 Před 3 lety +1

      @Naukumaija Mau-mau Summary - he considers unexplainable things magic/god. But god has no explanatory power. He is explaining a mystery by appealing to another mystery. We don't know is also a good answer to things we can't explain yet.

    • @DJ-uc8mk
      @DJ-uc8mk Před 3 lety +2

      @@MidlifeCrisis82 Thats the truth. Let me the scary thing. Historically, the institutions that claim to know these unexplainable thins often times interject their oppression or will on a people. So instead of saying "I dont know" they will tell you a myth to try to explain the unexplainable and in that myth, you have to pay them taxes or be their slave

    • @NicolasGer
      @NicolasGer Před 3 lety

      @Naukumaija Mau-mau you don’t choose what something actually is. you just twisted everything I said

  • @lewiakk5844
    @lewiakk5844 Před 3 lety +1

    Pesah means open.
    Also there is no "The Midrash" there are Midrash tanhuma Midrash Rabba etc..

    • @Exjewatlarge
      @Exjewatlarge Před 8 měsíci

      Pesah does not mean “open”. “Petah - פתח” means “opening”. Take the name of the judge Jephthah. His name in Hebrew is Yiftah - יפתח: he will open.