💭
Trump: I don’t think there’s anything that’s going to get me
into heaven. I think I’m not heaven bound. I’m not sure I’m
going to be able make heaven
❖ [Matthew
19:24-26] ❖
Again I tell
you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than
for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God.” When the disciples
heard this, they were greatly astonished, saying, “Who then can be
saved?” But Jesus looked at them and said, “With man this is
impossible, but with God all things are possible.”
😔 No
wonder the Luciferian Edomites and Ishmaelites are waging a genocide
against the ancient Christian population of Ethiopia.
An
engineer has made a bold claim that the Garden of Eden was located in
Africa, challenging the traditional belief that it lay in the Middle
East.
According to
the Bible, the Garden of Eden was a paradise where God placed Adam
and Eve, featuring a river that split into four branches: Gihon,
Euphrates, Tigris and Pishon.
Many scholars
have long assumed that because the Tigris and Euphrates run through
modern-day Iraq, Eden must have been in that region.
'All clues
point to Bahir Dar, near Lake Tana, a region of striking beauty,
abundant vegetation, and the source of the Blue Nile, which fits the
ancient description of Eden's rivers,' Jawaid wrote.
The Gihon, in
particular, is said to encompass the land of Cush, an ancient term
widely associated with Ethiopia.
Jawaid seized
on that linguistic clue, arguing that the Gihon corresponds to the
Blue Nile, which begins at Lake Tana before winding northward through
Sudan to join the White Nile in Khartoum.
'Lake Tana fits
the description of Eden perfectly,' he writes, noting that volcanic
ridges enclose the surrounding highlands and feed multiple river
systems.
In his
reconstruction, Lake Tana itself represents Eden, while the Garden of
Eden lies immediately to the south, around Bahir Dar, 'east of Eden'
in biblical phrasing, where the river emerges from the lake.
The Book of
Genesis discusses a 'flaming sword,' which God placed at the entrance
of the garden to prevent humans from accessing the Tree of Life after
Adam and Eve were banished.
The Tree of
Life was a literal tree with fruit that would grant eternal life.
After Adam and Eve sinned by eating from the Tree of the Knowledge of
Good and Evil, they were expelled from Eden to prevent them from also
eating the Tree of Life and living forever in their fallen state.
Jawaid's study
suggested that the 'fiery flashing sword' could be represented by the
volcanic ridges surrounding Lake Tana in the Ethiopian Highlands.
'Considering
that the valley is surrounded by historically active volcanoes, it is
very much possible that the active volcanoes formed the flaming sword
mentioned in the Bible,' he shared.
The study drew
on both the Bible and the Quran, noting that each describes a garden
on Earth, distinct from the eternal Paradise reserved for the
righteous, and pointed out that the region’s temperate climate,
fertile soil, and abundant water supply mirror the scriptural
depiction of a place free from hunger, thirst and oppressive heat.
Jawaid
highlighted the works of Virginia Morell, who recently explored the
region and found 'gardens are filled with colorful bougainvillea,
towering hibiscus and sweet-scented frangipani bushes.’
'The birds are
in abundance, ‘songbirds, sugar-stealers, buffalo weavers, rosy
finches, flitted from bloom to bloom. Dense stands of papyrus grow
along parts of Lake Tana’s shoreline,' according to Morell.
'With its
languid air and bounty of flowers and birds, Bahir Dar is about as
close as one gets to paradise in Ethiopia.
'The singing of
the birds and the breeze scented with jasmine, ginger, and
honeysuckle make the environment very uplifting. The fig and mango
trees, acacias, and the foreign eucalyptus provide nice shade on the
grassy banks of the Blue Nile around the area.'
These details,
according to Jawaid, suggested that the region would be the closest
place to paradise on Earth.
The engineer
also pointed out that the region’s temperate climate, fertile soil,
and abundant water supply mirror the scriptural depiction of a place
free from hunger, thirst and oppressive heat.