- PART ONE: The New Testament churches sins against our Lord Jesus Christ Himself.
- Section 2: The sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God
- SECTION 4: The sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God
- SECTION 5: The sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God the churches
- Section SEVEN The sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God
- Section TEN The sins committed by the New Testament the churches and the truth in the spoken words of God
- SECTION 11: The sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God
- Sunday’s worship betrayal and hypocrisy of the New Testament churches
- SECTION 8: The sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God
- Section 1: The sins commited by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God
- The sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth in the spoken words of God the churches
- Section 3: Sins committed by the New Testament churches and the truth of the spoken words of God
- SECTION 2: . The sins committed by the New Testament churches
Proclamation and Call to Repentance
God has commanded me to proclaim these truths loudly: the churches must forsake the first day of the week as a day of rest, observe the Lord’s feast days as holy convocations, honor the seventh-day Sabbath, and recognize His new year as the beginning of the year.
I pray with the truth of Jesus Christ, according to scripture, that the churches may understand the severity of their sins and repent sincerely.
The Spiritual Significance of Christ’s Death
Jesus’ death on the cross fulfilled the ceremonial laws. The veil of the temple was torn (Matthew 27:50-51; Luke 23:44-46; John 19:30), symbolizing the obsolescence of animal sacrifices and Levitical ordinances. His blood purged the ceremonial law, making salvation accessible to all by faith (1 Corinthians 5:7-8; John 1:29, 1:35).
The shedding of His blood began in Gethsemane (Luke 22:44), where He experienced hematohidrosis, sweating drops of blood due to extreme agony. He was flogged by Roman soldiers (Mark 5:17), crowned with thorns, and ultimately crucified. The veil of the temple was torn, the sun darkened, and His death fulfilled God’s prophecy that none of His bones would be broken (John 19:30; Luke 23:45).
Through His sacrifice, Jesus destroyed the ceremonial laws, yet the Ten Commandments, written by God’s own finger, remain holy, never nailed to the cross or obsolete.
The Distinction Between the Book of the Covenant and the Ten Commandments
The “Book of the Covenant” contained over 613 ceremonial laws (Exodus 24:6-8; Deuteronomy 31:24-26). These were nailed to the cross by Jesus Christ. In contrast, the Ten Commandments were written by God Himself, placed inside the Ark of the Covenant (Deuteronomy 10:3), and remain binding.
Misunderstanding or deliberate mislabeling by translators and the influence of the antichrist caused confusion among the churches, obscuring the distinction between ceremonial laws and the eternal Ten Commandments.