2018年12月27日星期四

大審判是憑氣味的😱!: 氣 味,審判,和給偉人的美味開胃前菜


大審判是憑氣味的😱!:
氣味,審判,和給偉人的美味開胃前菜
Smell, Judgement, and Savory Appetizers for the Nephilim


https://youtu.be/H9c_l2s6Wk8

Watch the 30 seconds of this even if you have seen this before

Seriously!! One attribute of the Messiah is that He judges by smell! Really?!? Is that even biblical?
God created our senses as a bridge between the visible and invisible realms. Watch a beautiful sunset. Listen to a stirring symphony. Smell a delicate fragrance. Taste a delectable wine. Touch the soft cheek of a child. In stark contrast, who has not taken out a pungent bag of garbage?  Those are our five senses at work -- taking in and experiencing our universe.

The prophet Isaiah says in regard to the Messiah in Isaiah 11:

And there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out of his roots:
2 And the spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord;
3 And shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord: and he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, neither reprove after the hearing of his ears:
4 But with righteousness shall he judge the poor, and reprove with equity for the meek of the earth: and he shall smite the earth: with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked.
In the Hebrew, the word for delight is v’haricho and has the same root as the word for smell - rayach.

Jewish commentators interpreted this to mean that the Messiah will be able to judge through the sense of smell. We do not hear that in Christian circles.

The NET:

[I]t is possible that “the fear of the Lord” is likened to incense. This coming king will get the same kind of delight from obeying (fearing) the Lord, as a deity does in the incense offered by worshipers.

The term “And his delight” is rooted in the same Hebrew word for spirit as the prophet wanted to emphasize this principle. Commentators understood that Messiah will be fully consumed by the Spirit of God. One commentator added that the term “and his delight” is rooted in the Hebrew word smell, as the Messiah will have a divine understanding of men’s hearts and their goodness and wickedness. The understanding of this commentator is important, as he acknowledges at the very least that the Messiah will have supernatural attributes. He shall be animated, v’haricho (power of smell), with the fear of G‑d.” This means He will be able to detect the truth of a person’s statement and will truthfully judge who is guilty, — “not after the sight of his eyes shall he judge.”

The commentator placed emphasis that the nose as it is between the eyes and ears mentioned in that very verse.

A veritable plethora of verses began to come to mind concerning smell, such as aroma and fragrance. How many times in Scripture do these concepts appear in connection with sacrifice and offering?

We are to be holy as He is holy, and whether you adhere to biblical guidance for eating the consumption of clean food is critical for our day. Could it just be possible that eating clean makes one smell different? As an organic farmer I know that it does. But more importantly, does clean eating make one smell different to God? If we are then a pleasing aroma to God, does consuming unclean things such as human flesh, GMO mixed hybrid plants-animals-insect, aborted baby parts of any kind, make us palatable to the nephilim? It is quite possible, though a speculation, that clean eating in the days to come provide us with another layer of spiritual armor in our battle against Satan. 

Savory and Unsavory

Will Messiah judge by smell?

Consider Genesis 27:26-27!

26 Then his father Isaac said to him, “Please come close and kiss me, my son.” 27 So he came close and kissed him; and when he smelled the smell of his garments, he blessed him and said,

“See, the smell of my son

Is like the smell of a field which the Lord has blessed;”

My friends this is a picture!! Isaac is a type and foreshadow of the Messiah! Jacob here is instructed to ‘come close and kiss me, my son.’ The story highlights the savory last meal prepared for Isaac. Around the story swirls the union of Esau and Judith, a grief to Isaac and Rebekah, for alas, she was a Hittite.

Amazingly, in Psalm 2, a Messianic passage we read,

Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way, For His wrath may soon be kindled. How blessed are all who take refuge in Him!

Jacob drew near to the generational ‘messiah’ and kissed him and was judged by his smell!! Critical to our understanding is that Jacob was wearing the skins of two small kids, as well as Esau's garments. Isaac could smell the blood of the goats, a picture for forgiveness through atonement. I would much rather kiss the Son - my Savior and Redeemer -  than kiss the ring.

Will we be judged by the smell of the garments of our eldest brother Jesus and the blood of atonement shed on our behalf? The foreshadow above indicates smell will be a factor of reproving and judgement, although the blood of Messiah has primacy. 

Now, back to the question on the table…

“If eating clean makes us a ‘pleasing aroma to God,’ then, does eating unclean make us ‘palatable’ to the nephilim?”

Evil has commandeered your food supply, and current trends are taking the rarefied and perfect nutrient-dense foods provided by the Creator and have been incrementally transforming them into digestible and shape-shifting profanity, whether through abomination or cannibalism.

As we eat clean for our King we become detestable to those such as the fallen angels,  because we have lost that savory flavor they lust to consume.

The Breath

Does clean eating make us into a more pleasant habitation for the Holy Spirit?

In Genesis 2:7 it states that "God breathed life into the form of Man." The Hebrew word for breath is the same as the word for soul  -- neshama. One's spiritual life force comes, metaphorically, by way of air and respiration.

Breathing, and its associated sense of smell, is the most spiritual of senses, with the least physical matter involved.

I think there's truth to common expressions like, "He has a good nose for business," and "Something doesn't smell right." Smell is intangible, yet very intuitive. It represents one's internal compass. The ancient understanding is that when the Messiah comes, he will "smell and judge" - that is, he will use his spiritual sensitivity to determine complex truths and wicked problems.

Messiah judges with righteousness the poor and decides with equity for the suffering ones of the earth, and he shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breadth of his lips shall he slay the wicked." If He does not use his eyes or ears it must be through smell.

Appetites of the Nephilim

https://youtu.be/U5NWCD7D5n8
Trust us...

What enters through our sensory doors? How stimulated -- overstimulated -- are we by the multitude of sights, sounds, smells, tastes and touches inundating our daily interactions? And what impact does it have on us?  Are we being prepared as lambs to slaughter for an internal and external alien invasion?
Evil forces are hacking your body, including your microbiome, to be appetizers for demons.  This same evil is seducing your your taste and appetites desensitizing you from the invisible and Godly ethereal aspects of your life.

You can choose to eat clean whether it is for health, protection, or sensory delight.  You might even get a chance to smell heaven in this gap between the invisible and visible,  the sensory and the supra-sensory -- as we learn to use our senses to reach beyond our senses and experience new dimensions.

Indeed, the nose knows!







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