As I start to think about this remember in trees, it was going through my head. And all of a sudden, I remembered this study I once did on Deuteronomy 21, 22, right, which I have here on a paper plate. And you'll see why it's on a paper plate if you go to christiancarguy.com, because I started to think about this is where we get the idea of hanging someone on a tree is from Deuteronomy 21, 22. And it says if somebody does something worthy of death, you hang him on a tree. Well, I knew what that looked like in regular Hebrew, but the Holy Spirit just prompted me to go to the ancient, ancient Hebrew. It was a completely different script. And the Jews teach that maybe that was the common way, but if you look at the most ancient Hebrew you can find, like stuff they found on vases in the King David's time, you're going to find it's a different script than the Hebrew that you will normally see today.
Well, this becomes significant. You're smiling, but if you've seen my paper plate. So I couldn't find anywhere where somebody had Deuteronomy 21, 22 in that ancient script, so I took the time to write it out. I didn't write it out. I didn't go from left to right like you normally would do Hebrew, so I could see it as compared to English. And when you look at this, I'm telling you, because the letter tuv, which is in this several times, is a cross. And so when it says you hang him on a tree and you put that in ancient Hebrew, by the way, I've got a picture of my drawing there at ChristianCarguy.com, you're going to find there are three crosses, there are two nails, and three shepherd's staffs, because they use pictures, right, instead of letters. And these pictures are very significant, and at the end of the verse, when it says tree, guess what you got? It's a zadik. It's that tree, right? That we're all made righteous on.
Whisper: medium.en / 2024-01-13 18:22:17 / 2024-01-13 18:23:33 / 1