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Quantum Leap and Torah


How many of you remember the old television show that aired in the 1990's called "Quantum Leap"?  It involved a man, Sam Beckett, who stepped into a time accelerator in the year 1999 which caused him to "leap" backwards in time into other people.  Living inside these other people from the past, he would have to put right what once went wrong in their lives in order for "God" to allow him his next leap.  For 5 years he was always hoping his next leap in time would be the leap back to 1999, his own body and home.

I know the above is just a wild sciencie-fiction idea, but I have always been fascinated by the concept of time travel.  In fact, Yah apparently finds the subject just as interesting.  In Ezekiel, even after the nation of Yisrael has been judged and destroyed, Yah allows Ezekiel to "go back in time" and behold the abominations that were done in secret within the temple in order to behold the iniquity that brought on their destruction.  This, perhaps, is open to interpretation, but bear with me for just a moment.

Yah is, at the very least, an historian, and the Bible itself is a kind of "time travel" gateway that allows us to look into the past and relive its events through the eyes of the Almighty.

In another time travel movie released in 2004 called "The Butterfly Effect", a young man tries to go back in time and alter key events in his life to help his friends.  However, each time he does this, he winds up altering his life or the lives of his friends for the worse.

Finally, he realizes he needs to give up the person he loved the most, a special girl, by going back to his life when he was seven and cutting off his relationship with her.  By doing this, he changes the lives of her and everyone else for the better.  Only by giving up that which he held most dear was he able to save his friends and right their destiny.

Sam Beckett had to learn a similar lesson.  In the final episode he has to save his friend, Al, from a miserable life of 5 marriages by making sure his first wife does not believe the lie that Al died in the Vietnam War.  Once he does this, Sam leaps off somewhere else but never leaps home.  He gives up his own dream to help his closest friend.

Both these time travel stories utimately are about self-sacrifice and the need to place others above ourself.  The only reason I have spent the past 49 days exalting Torah and the Ruach, despite the many attacks I have received from people on this forum, is because I love you guys and want you to be converted by the glorious light of the Torah-centered gospel.  Say what you will, that is my one and only motive.  I am driven by charity; by love.

Like Sam Beckett, I am trying to go "back in time" and undo the wicked theology that you all have absorbed throughout your past.  I am trying to soften your hearts, throw back the clock, bring you all back to the tenderness you once had several years ago, before satanic christianity hardened your hearts against the Torah of Moshe.

I am fully aware that by doing this, I am sacrificing my time, talents and life in general.  I know that, for the past 49 days, I could have been pursuing my own pleasures and desires.  But I MUST do this.  Woe is me if I do not.

If I could lose my life, become a martyr if I knew that would ensure each and every one of you would repent and keep every jot and tittle of Torah, I would go to my execution stake today.  I am dead serious about this.  My life means nothing to me if I can but win you folks to the truth of keeping Torah.

I will continue to try and "leap from life to life",  pushing back the clock as it were by softening your hearts with Torah, softening it until it is as tender as it was when you were all but little children, innocent and filled with wonder, "hoping to put right what once went wrong" in your lives and hoping, that someday soon, I might be able to rest from my labors and "leap home".