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Wednesday, December 3, 2025

The Anunnaki and the Creation of Their Offspring

December 03, 2025

 

The Anunnaki and the Creation of Their Offspring

The Lost Book of Enki: Complete Translation and Interpretation

The ancient Sumerian tablets—weathered clay records etched by the world’s first known civilization—preserve a dramatic epic of origins, catastrophe, and divine intention. Among the most provocative interpretations is The Lost Book of Enki, a reconstructed literary narrative (popularized by Zecharia Sitchin) that weaves together myths, king lists, and creation hymns into a unified account of the Anunnaki, their arrival to Earth, and their crafting of humanity as their offspring.

What follows is a full, cohesive retelling of that narrative—respecting its mythic grandeur while presenting it clearly for modern readers.


1. The Descent of the Anunnaki

According to the narrative, long before humanity emerged, a race known as the Anunnaki descended from the heavens in search of resources—especially gold, prized for its supposed atmospheric and technological importance. They settled first in Eridu, the city of Enki, and later expanded into the harsh mining regions of the Abzu (ancient Africa).

They were giants in stature, radiant in appearance, living thousands of years by virtue of their long planetary cycles. Their era on Earth was marked by advanced knowledge—astronomy, metallurgy, agriculture—skills they would eventually grant to humanity.

But beneath their divine aura lay unmistakably familiar traits: ambition, rivalry, loyalty, and frailty.


2. The Revolt and the Need for Offspring

The endless toil of mining wore upon the Anunnaki workers. After ages of labor, they staged a bloodless rebellion, pleading for relief from their crushing burden. Faced with potential mutiny, the Anunnaki council sought a solution:

Fashion a new being—primitive by comparison, yet capable of labor.
A replacement workforce.
A hybrid child of Earth and the heavens.

The responsibility fell to Enki, master of knowledge, and Ninmah, the great mother-goddess and healer.

Thus began the most ambitious endeavor ever attempted on Earth:
the creation of the Anunnaki’s offspring—humankind.


3. The Laboratories of Life

In the House of Life in the Abzu, Enki revealed to Ninmah the strange, failed experiments already attempted: creatures with mixed features—quadruped bodies, mismatched limbs, malformed organs. These were early attempts at blending the essence of the Anunnaki with indigenous hominids.

Ninmah, skilled in birth and healing, understood the challenge:

  • How to mingle the “essence” (later reinterpreted symbolically as blood, genes, or divine life-force)

  • How to choose the right womb

  • How to guide gestation so the resulting being resembled neither beast nor monster, but a new kind of creature

  • One capable of speech, dexterity, and obedience

Failure followed failure—infants born blind, mute, lame, malformed. Yet the goddess persisted. Enki studied each result, adjusting the sacred ME formulas.


4. The First Success: The Birth of Adamu

Breakthrough came only when Enki proposed a bold idea:

“Let the womb of an Anunnaki bear the merging of Heaven and Earth.”

Ninmah offered her own womb, accepting both the honor and the danger.

Into a vessel of Abzu clay the fertilized essence was placed. After an uncertain gestation, she delivered a perfect male child.

He was not Anunnaki—but not fully Earth-creature either.

His skin was smooth and dark like fresh clay.
His limbs were strong, his senses sharp.
He made proper vocal sounds.

Ninmah lifted him proudly:

“Adamu shall be his name—One Who is of Earth’s Clay.”

He was the first model, the prototype of what humanity could be.


5. The Creation of Ti-Amat, the Mother of Life

A workforce could not come from a single being. Enki sought a female counterpart. This time Ninki, Enki’s spouse, offered her womb.

The result was a perfected female child, golden-haired and smooth-skinned—

Ti-Amat, “The Mother of Life.”

From her essence, seven female “birth mothers” were created, while seven male Earthlings had already been formed. Together, these fourteen—the First People—were the template for the new race.

Adamu and Ti-Amat were brought to the Edin, the cultivated highlands, where the Anunnaki could observe them. Other deities marveled at Enki’s creation.


6. The Problem of Sterility

Though the male and female workers matured, something was wrong:

They mated, but no children came.

Their “essence-tree” lacked two vital branches—what Ningishzidda (the wise son of Enki, later associated with Thoth) called the “male” and “female” powers of procreation.

Without these, the children of Earth were incapable of bearing offspring.

The Anunnaki were dismayed—another catastrophic flaw.


7. The Gift of Procreation

Enki made a controversial decision. Secretly, without the assent of Enlil (his stern brother and rival), he and Ninmah and Ningishzidda:

  • Put Adamu and Ti-Amat into deep sleep

  • Extracted the life-essence from the rib of one and infused it into the other

  • Restored the missing branches of the “Tree of Life”

When the two awoke, they were changed.

They knew their own bodies—knew desire, knew union.
They fashioned aprons of leaves.
They became aware of themselves as male and female.

Procreation—the power reserved to the gods—had been granted to Earthlings.

When Enlil discovered this, he was enraged.
His verdict was swift:

“Let them be cast out of Edin.
Let them live in the Abzu, where their offspring may labor.”

Thus Adamu and Ti-Amat were expelled—a clear echo of the later Hebrew tale of Adam and Eve. But in this version, the “sin” was not disobedience—it was self-awareness and reproduction, a power Enki granted against Enlil’s command.


8. Humanity as the Offspring of Heaven and Earth

With fertility restored, the race of Primitive Workers multiplied. The burden of mining shifted from divine beings to human hands. Over time, these humans learned:

  • Agriculture

  • Animal husbandry

  • City-building

  • Writing, measurement, astronomy

They became not merely workers, but the children of the gods—offspring of the Anunnaki’s essence and the Earth’s clay.


9. Enki’s Lament and the Book of Witnessing

The narrative then returns to the prophet-scribe Endubsar (identified with the later Isaiah), who is chosen by Enki to record the true history after the Great Flood. Enki, sorrowful at humanity’s suffering and at the destruction he opposed, commands:

“Write it on a sealed tablet…
A witnessing for the last days.”

These words frame the entire text as a testament of origins, catastrophe, and destiny, preserved for a future age capable of understanding it.


10. Interpretation: Myth, Memory, and Meaning

While modern scholars view these stories as mythology, their symbolic power is undeniable:

  • The divine beings represent forces of nature, culture, and cosmic order.

  • The genetic “essences” reflect ancient attempts to explain inheritance and biological difference.

  • The creation of humanity echoes the universal question: How did we come to be?

  • The tensions between Enki and Enlil mirror the moral struggles of creation, freedom, and responsibility.

Zecharia Sitchin’s translations—though speculative and rejected by mainstream Assyriology—were influential in reawakening interest in Mesopotamian myth and its surprising parallels to biblical and global creation traditions.

In this mythic framework, the Anunnaki are not merely gods—they are parents: flawed, conflicted, but ultimately invested in the destiny of their hybrid offspring.

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Song: I Forgive You

December 02, 2025


In “I Forgive You,” Trey Knowles delivers a powerful confession wrapped in the language of restoration and grace. The song becomes a living example of how forgiveness—real, painful, transformative forgiveness—reflects the truth that love covers a multitude of sins.

Trey stands transparent before God and before others, offering a public apology born from humility: “I’m sorry.” He doesn’t just want forgiveness; he invites purification, crying out, “Burn me with fire—burn every corrupt thing in me,” symbolizing a desire for God to cleanse the deepest parts of his heart. The chorus, “I forgive you, do you forgive me?” becomes a bridge between wounded people, between past and present, and between humanity and God. The song ultimately teaches that forgiveness isn’t weakness—it is the fire that refines, restores, and makes reconciliation possible.


Saturday, November 29, 2025

Religious Beasts - Truth & Knowledge

November 29, 2025


 

Truth & Knowledge: Episode 90 — “Religious Beasts”

In this episode, Trey Knowles exposes the nature of what he calls Religious Beasts. He explains that Scripture teaches we have only one Father in Heaven and only one true Teacher—Yeshua, Jesus Himself. Trey emphasizes that sin carries consequences, and that the only form of religion God accepts, according to James 1:27, is to remain pure and free from corruption. He challenges religious groups whose actions contradict the character of God, questioning how such systems could originate from Him. Throughout the episode, Trey Knowles confronts and examines these Religious Beasts that operate in opposition to God’s ways.

Friday, November 28, 2025

Song: Dont Waste Your Time

November 28, 2025

 


In “Don’t Waste Your Time,” Trey Knowles' song speaks frankly about why he refuses to give his time, energy, or spiritual gifts—his “pearls”—to those who choose darkness over light. He compares these people to swine, following the works of the devil and walking in the shadow of the colonizer’s legacy. Since they reject truth and the light of God, Trey concludes that it is pointless to worry about their salvation. Instead, he chooses to focus on protecting his own soul and walking in righteousness. Still, Trey carries no hatred; he sincerely wishes God’s Spirit, clarity, and righteousness upon everyone.



Song: They Don’t Care About Us

November 28, 2025

 



In “They Don’t Care About Us,” Trey Knowles delivers a powerful message about recognizing who truly stands with you. He declares that if God is for you, no force can stand against you—especially not the European colonizers who once held his people in captivity and falsely claimed to represent the image of God. Trey urges listeners to recognize that these systems were never created for their wellbeing. Since those who colonized you do not care about you, he calls on you to step out of their systems and draw closer to the God who genuinely loves and protects you. The song warns against remaining in “the belly of the beast,” a Europe that came to kill, steal, and destroy, and encourages seeking spiritual freedom in God instead.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

3d Printed Chicken

November 26, 2025
KFC is not currently using 3D printed chicken in any of its restaurants. In 2020, KFC's former Russian division announced a one-time experiment to develop 3D bioprinted chicken nuggets in partnership with a Russian bioprinting company, but this was only an experiment and not part of a long-term strategy. 
The KFC Experiment
  • Partnership: KFC Russia partnered with 3D Bioprinting Solutions to create lab-grown chicken material for nuggets.
  • Process: The goal was to use chicken cells and plant-based material, incorporating KFC's signature breading and spices to replicate the taste and texture of original chicken nuggets.
  • Goals: The company highlighted the potential environmental benefits and sustainability of cell-based meat production compared to traditional farming methods

 

What Is 3D-Printed Chicken?

3D-printed chicken refers to chicken meat created using 3D-printing technology, usually from:

  • Cultivated (lab-grown) chicken cells

  • Plant-based proteins (soy, pea, wheat, mycoprotein)

  • Hybrid blends (real animal cells + plant proteins)

The printer deposits edible “bio-ink” layer-by-layer to create the texture of whole-cut chicken like fillets, tenders, or nuggets.


🧪 How It’s Made

  1. Cell or protein preparation

    • Cultivated chicken: real chicken cells grown in bioreactors

    • Plant-based: proteins mixed into a paste

  2. “Bio-ink” formation
    The prepared material is turned into a printable paste with fats, fibers, and flavorings.

  3. 3D printing
    A food-grade extruder lays material down in patterns that mimic muscle fibers.

  4. Cooking or finishing
    The printed chicken is baked, grilled, or cooked with lasers by some experimental printers.


🍗 Why Do This?

  • More realistic texture than typical plant-based nuggets

  • Sustainable: lower water and land use

  • Customizable nutrition (fat %, salt, protein content)

  • Scalable production for consistent quality


🌍 Who’s Making It?

Several companies are actively developing 3D-printed chicken:

  • Redefine Meat (Israel) – plant-based whole cuts

  • Novameat (Spain) – 3D-printed fibrous meat analogs

  • GOOD Meat + Eat Just – cultivated chicken (not always printed, but related tech)

  • SavorEat – automated restaurant printing stations


🔥 Can You Make 3D-Printed Chicken at Home?

Not easily yet, but you can:

  • Buy a food-safe 3D printer (like Foodini or Choc Creator)

  • Print plant-based chicken paste or your own protein gel

Most consumer food printers are limited to purées, doughs, or chocolate, but the tech is improving.


🎨 Want Me to Design Something for You?

I can generate:

  • A recipe for printable chicken paste

  • A 3D-printable model for chicken shapes

  • A step-by-step guide to printing plant-based chicken at home

  • A visual concept art image (just ask!)

What would you like to do with 3D-printed chicken?

Friday, November 21, 2025

Comedy: Characteristic Relations

November 21, 2025



Trey Knowles – Characteristic Relations: An Allegorical Comedy Special

Trey Knowles’ Characteristic Relations is an allegorical comedy that exposes the enemy hiding in plain sight—those who pose as followers of Christ but embody the opposite characteristics of God. Through sharp wit and spiritual insight, Trey reveals how these false Christians mirror everything Scripture says about the enemy. In this thought-provoking special, Trey “turns the lights on” for his audience, asking: What if Prophet Muhammad had only encountered fake Christians—those pretending to follow Christ while living to kill, steal, and destroy? Characteristic Relations dives deep into the contrast between the true spirit and character of God the Father and Jesus Christ, and those who merely claim to follow Him but fail to reflect His nature.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Song: Do Not Be Deceived

November 20, 2025

 



Do Not Be Deceived by Trey Knowles

Do Not Be Deceived is a bold, evocative track that blends spiritual warning with poetic imagery, drawing from Qur’anic wisdom to confront the illusions of worldly life. Trey Knowles delivers a gripping message about the deceptive pull of materialism, desire, and cultural influence — symbolized through the striking image of a serpent cloaked in American colors.

Built on atmospheric production and haunting melodic tones, the song urges listeners to see beyond the glitter of the modern world and return to divine truth. With verses inspired by Surah Luqman, Surah Sad, and other Qur’anic reminders, the lyrics challenge the listener to break free from the whispers of temptation and recognize life on Earth as a temporary journey, not a destination.

This track is both a warning and a wake-up call: an anthem for clarity in an age of distraction.

A spiritual stand. A reminder. A call to awareness.
Do Not Be Deceived is a powerful fusion of message and music — unmistakably Trey Knowles.

A Message to Saudi Arabia

November 20, 2025

A Message to Saudi Arabia — By Trey Knowles

“Let not the worldly life deceive you, and do not let the Deceiver deceive you about Allah.”
Surah Luqman (31:33)

America’s influence is approaching quietly, like a serpent at the door—subtle, persuasive, and often unseen. So do not follow worldly desires instead of God, and do not follow the footsteps of Satan. He is a clear enemy to you. His path leads toward temptation, excess, and obsession with the material world.


Look at the history of the Western world. Do not be deceived.


This message is not about politics, but about truth—a reminder of what the Qur’an teaches concerning the nature of this world and how believers should move within it.


The Qur’an warns: Do not be deceived or led astray by worldly life.


Worldly life is temporary—beautiful yet fleeting, full of distractions that pull the heart away from its true purpose. The world is not condemned, but believers are not meant to be rooted in it. Muslims are cautioned not to chase its desires, wealth, status, or entertainments. Life on Earth is a test, a chance to build righteousness, strength of character, and nearness to God.


Repeatedly, the Qur’an reminds us that the world deceives—its pleasures fade, and its attractions can blur the clarity of faith. Yet mankind is honored as khalîfah, stewards of the Earth entrusted with justice, balance, and moral responsibility. This position demands vigilance, humility, and discipline.


Ultimately, the Qur’an presents life as a journey. The believer is a traveler—passing through, not settling. True life is in the Hereafter, and success lies in prioritizing faith, obedience, and righteousness over the glitter of the temporary world.


Below are the Qur’anic verses that emphasize this truth:


1. Do not be deceived by worldly life

Surah Luqman (31:33)
“So let not the worldly life deceive you, and do not let the Deceiver deceive you about Allah.”
A clear warning that the world can mislead the heart.


2. Do not follow worldly desires instead of God

Surah Sad (38:26)
“…Do not follow desire, lest it lead you astray from the path of Allah.”

Surah Al-Jathiyah (45:23)
“Have you seen he who takes his own desire as his god…?”
Desires are not meant to rule over a person.


3. The world is a distraction—do not chase it

Surah Al-An’am (6:70)
“Leave those who take this worldly life as play and amusement…”

Surah Al-Hadid (57:20)
Describes worldly life as play, amusement, and temporary enjoyment—never worth sacrificing eternal life for.


4. Do not follow those who live only for the world

Surah Hud (11:15–16)
“Whoever desires the worldly life and its adornments — We fully repay them… but they will have nothing in the Hereafter.”
A reminder that worldly success without faith is ultimately empty.


5. Do not follow the footsteps of Satan

Surah Al-Baqarah (2:168)
“…And do not follow the footsteps of Satan. Indeed, he is a clear enemy to you.”
His path leads to temptation, excess, and worldly obsession.


A Message to Saudi Arabia — By Trey Knowles



Monday, November 17, 2025

Talmud Believers: Identity, Tradition, and Interpretive Authority in Rabbinic Judaism

November 17, 2025


Talmud Believers: Identity, Tradition, and Interpretive Authority in Rabbinic Judaism

The term “Talmud believers” is not a formal religious designation, yet it usefully describes the central role the Talmud plays for Jews who regard Rabbinic tradition as authoritative. This paper explores the concept by analyzing (1) the historical development of the Talmud, (2) the communities that treat the Talmud as binding, (3) the meaning of belief in a text within Judaism, (4) the Talmud’s place in shaping Jewish law (Halakhah) and worldview, and (5) modern debates surrounding authority, interpretation, and identity. The goal is to clarify how and why the Talmud functions as a foundational text for millions of Jews, and how “believing in the Talmud” differs from belief in a sacred text in other religious systems.


1. Introduction

Within Judaism, identity is not normally defined by belief in a single book. Rather, Judaism centers on a shared covenant, communal practice, and a chain of interpretive tradition. Still, the Talmud—the compilation of the Mishnah (ca. 200 CE) and the Gemara (ca. 500–600 CE)—became the most authoritative guide for Jewish life for nearly 1,500 years. Although Jews do not typically describe themselves as “Talmud believers,” the vast majority of Jewish law and practice is derived from Talmudic reasoning.

This paper therefore adopts the phrase “Talmud believers” to mean:

Individuals or communities within Judaism who regard the Talmud as an authoritative source for religious law, moral reasoning, and communal life.

This includes traditional Orthodox Jews, many Conservative Jews, and scholars and students within Rabbinic Judaism broadly.


2. The Development of the Talmud as an Authoritative Text

2.1 The Mishnah

Compiled by Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi around 200 CE, the Mishnah systematized earlier oral traditions. Its authority came not from a claim of divine inspiration, but from its acceptance as a summary of normative rabbinic law.

2.2 The Gemara

The Gemara—developed in both Babylonia and the Land of Israel—comments on the Mishnah, debates its meaning, and expands on legal and theological issues. The Babylonian Talmud, in particular, became the primary legal reference for subsequent generations.

2.3 Canonization Through Practice

Unlike the Hebrew Bible, the Talmud was never formally “canonized.” Rather, its authority emerged through:

  • continuous study

  • legal reliance

  • commentary traditions

  • community enforcement

Thus, “belief” in the Talmud developed organically as Jewish communities accepted its legal reasoning as binding.


3. What It Means to Be a “Talmud Believer”

3.1 Judaism’s Different Model of Belief

Judaism generally emphasizes practice over dogma. Unlike Christianity and Islam—which have doctrinal statements about belief—Judaism evaluates commitment through:

  • observance of mitzvot (commandments)

  • engagement in study

  • adherence to Halakhah

Therefore, “believing” in the Talmud is primarily functional, not creedal. It means accepting the rabbinic interpretive model that determines how commandments are understood.

3.2 The Talmud as Interpretive Authority

For most traditional Jews, the Talmud is not simply an ancient book; it is:

  • a legal system

  • a moral philosophy

  • a method of reasoning

  • a living tradition carried forward by commentators

Thus, Talmud believers are not merely accepting text but participating in a continuous interpretive process.


4. Communities of Talmud Believers

4.1 Orthodox Judaism

Orthodox Jews most fully embody the concept. They regard Talmudic reasoning as binding and treat later legal authorities (Rishonim and Acharonim) as extensions of the Talmudic tradition.

4.2 Conservative Judaism

Conservative Jews affirm the Talmud’s authority but embrace historical-critical scholarship and reinterpretation through the Rabbinical Assembly’s legal decisions.

4.3 Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism

Reform and Reconstructionist movements do not consider the Talmud binding, though they value it as a cultural and historical text. They would not fit the category of “Talmud believers.”

4.4 Non-Jewish Students of the Talmud

Academics, historians, and interfaith scholars often study the Talmud without seeing it as authoritative. They are not “believers” in a religious sense but contribute meaningfully to Talmudic understanding.


5. The Talmud’s Role in Daily Life and Law

5.1 Halakhah (Jewish Law)

Virtually all Halakhic rulings—from Sabbath observance to commercial law to marriage—trace their roots to Talmudic discussions.

5.2 Ethics and Philosophy

The Talmud offers:

  • moral debates

  • discussions of justice

  • reflections on suffering, the afterlife, and human dignity

These shape Jewish ethics to this day.

5.3 Cultural Identity

For many Jews, participation in Talmud study (e.g., Daf Yomi) symbolizes connection to ancestral tradition. For such individuals, “belief” is expressed through lifelong study and dialogue.


6. Misconceptions About Talmudic Belief

6.1 “The Talmud replaces the Bible” — false

Jews view the Talmud as interpretation, not replacement.

6.2 “The Talmud is a book of secret doctrines” — false

It is a public legal and moral discourse, not esoteric mysticism.

6.3 “Talmud believers worship the Talmud” — false

Jews do not worship books. Study is an act of covenantal responsibility, not object-veneration.


7. Contemporary Debates

7.1 Modernity vs. Tradition

Issues include:

  • gender roles

  • LGBTQ+ inclusion

  • technological ethics

  • scientific knowledge

Debates revolve around whether Talmudic legal methods can adapt to modern realities.

7.2 Historical-Critical Scholarship

Many scholars view portions of the Talmud as products of their time. Orthodox communities reject this approach as undermining authority, while Conservative Judaism integrates historical analysis into legal interpretation.


8. Conclusion

The category of “Talmud believers,” though informal, captures a large segment of Jewry that treats the Talmud not only as a sacred text but as a living legal and ethical tradition. Their relationship to the Talmud is not defined by blind faith but by interpretation, communal continuity, and covenantal responsibility. Understanding this dynamic clarifies both the power of the Talmud in Jewish life and the diversity of approaches across different Jewish communities.


If you want to evaluate whether these individuals act in a godly manner, you may consult the teachings referenced in the Talmud passages linked below:

 https://www.sefaria.org/Yevamot.59b.6?lang=bi

https://www.sefaria.org/Sanhedrin.54a.30?lang=bi

Yeshua to Jesus Christ

November 17, 2025


Does the Name “Yeshua” Contain the Father’s Name? Yes — Indirectly.

  • Yeshua (ישוע)
    is a shortened form of

  • Yehoshua (יהושע)
    which contains the divine Name Yah (from YHWH).

So:

Yeshua literally means “Yahweh saves.”
The Father’s name is embedded in the meaning, not the pronunciation.

This is very significant:

  • The Son’s mission (“Yahweh saves”) expresses the Father’s character.

  • The name Yeshua reflects the Father’s will and purpose.

  • When the angel said:

    “You shall call His name Yeshua, because He will save His people from their sins.”
    (Matthew 1:21


Note: John 5:43 states, "I have come in my Father's name, and you do not receive me; but if another comes in his own name, you will receive him". 

“I Have Come in My Father’s Name” — What Does It Mean?

In John 5:43, Jesus is saying:

  • He comes with, from, and bearing the authority of the Father.

  • He speaks the Father’s words (John 12:49).

  • He does the Father’s works (John 10:25).

  • He is sent by the Father (John 5:36).

The Aramaic name for Jesus is "Yeshua" (ישוע), which is a shortened form of the Hebrew name "Yehoshua" (יהושע), meaning "Yahweh is salvation" or "Yahweh saves".

Yahweh is one of the most common names for God in the Hebrew bible.

so when Yeshua says in 

John 5:43 states, "I have come in my Father's name, and you do not receive me; but if another comes in his own name, you will receive him".

In this verse, Yeshua is contrasting how people have rejected him, despite his coming with divine authority from God, while they would have been willing to accept someone else who came with their own authority. The passage explains that the religious leaders were focused on gaining honor from one another rather than from God.

Yeshua's authority: Yeshua is asserting that he has come with the authority of his Father (God), but the Jewish leaders refuse to accept him.

The contrast: He highlights the irony that these same leaders would readily accept someone else who came with his own authority, even if that person was a false prophet or imposter.

The reason for rejection: The verse's following lines explain the root cause: the leaders were more concerned with the honor they received from other people than with the honor that came from God.


 What About the Word “Christ”?

  • Christ comes from the Greek word Christos (Χριστός).

  • It means “Anointed One”, the Greek equivalent of Hebrew Mashiach (Messiah).

The word “Christ” later entered Latin, and much later into Slavic languages, but it is not originally Slavic.


The surname Christ is a German and Dutch name that is a short form of Christian or a nickname for "the Christian". It originates from the Latin Christus and Greek Christos, both meaning "anointed one," which is a translation of the Hebrew term Mashiach or Messiah. While "Christ" is a title, not a surname for Jesus, it has been adopted as a surname in various cultures and can also be an Americanized form of similar-sounding names.



Christ or von Christ is a relatively common surname in Germany, especially in Bavaria. Occasionally, the name has been incorporated into pseudonyms.

Benjamin C. Christ (1824–1869), American Civil War colonel

Brad Christ, American politician

Carol P. Christ (born 1945), American academic, feminist and eco-feminist theologian

Carol T. Christ (born 1944), American academic and administrator

Charles "Chilla" Christ (1911–1998), Australian cricketer

Dorothy Christ (1925–2020), All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player

Elizabeth Christ Trump (1880–1966), German-born American businesswoman, grandmother of U.S. President Donald Trump

Grégory Christ (born 1982), French football player

Hermann Christ (1833–1933), Swiss botanist

Johann Ludwig Christ (1739–1813), German naturalist, gardener and pastor

John Christ (born 1965), American musician

Karl Christ (1897 – after 1944), German First World War flying ace

Lena Christ (1881–1920), German writer

F. Michael Christ (born 1955), American mathematician

Norman Christ (born c. 1945), American academic

Sonja Christ (born 1984), 61st German Wine Queen

Sven Christ (born 1973), Swiss footballer

Victor Christ-Janer (1915–2008), American architect

Wilhelm von Christ (1831–1906), German classical scholar


Examples of Slavic surnames derived from Christ

Christovski: A surname from Macedonian and Bulgarian regions, derived from the name "Christo" and the Slavic suffix "-ski".

Kristof: A name variant of "Christopher," meaning "bearer of Christ," common in Poland and the Czech Republic.

Krystian: A popular name in Poland and among Polish-speaking populations, historically linked to Christianization in Eastern Europe.

Christofic: A name with roots in Eastern Europe, believed to be a patronymic or diminutive form of "Christoph".

Krist: A common shortened form in Slavic languages, used as a variant of Christian or Kristof.


The Importance of Names in 2 Chronicles 7:14

The verse says:

Note: “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”
—2 Chronicles 7:14

This passage highlights the spiritual and identity-based importance of names in the Hebrew worldview.

1. “Called by My Name” Means Identity, Not Just Label

To be called by God's name means:

  • Belonging to Him

  • Carrying His identity

  • Representing His character

  • Living under His covenant

In Hebrew thought, a name (shem) carries essence, purpose, and identity.
So God is saying:

“If the people who carry My identity return to Me…”

He is not talking about pronunciation alone — but about identity alignment.


2. Names Determine Relationship

In the ancient world, to be “called by someone’s name” meant:

  • You were under their protection

  • You were part of their household

  • You bore their mark

  • You lived according to their standard

Israel was called YHWH’s people because they carried the Name in covenant and purpose.


3. The Name Determines Blessing or Judgment

The power of this verse is that healing is connected to:

  • Returning to the identity of God

  • Returning to His ways

  • Returning to the relationship signified by His Name

When the people lose the Name, they lose the blessing.
When they return to the Name, restoration begins.


4. Name Loss = Identity Loss

This ties directly to your larger theme “When Absent Names Become Absent Character.”

In biblical history:

  • When Israel forgot the Name of YHWH, they lost their identity and moral direction

  • When colonized groups lost their ancestral names, they lost cultural identity and spiritual grounding

This is not coincidental — the Bible itself shows that name erasure leads to identity erosion.


5. Name Restoration = Healing

2 Chronicles 7:14 ends with:

“I will heal their land.”

Healing comes after the people return to the Name.

This mirrors global decolonization today:

  • Restoring ancestral names

  • Restoring cultural dignity

  • Restoring spiritual purpose

  • Restoring historical memory

Just as God healed Israel when they returned to His Name, colonized peoples today heal when they return to their original names and identities.


Summary

2 Chronicles 7:14 shows that names are:

  • Markers of identity

  • Carriers of divine or ancestral purpose

  • Foundations of relationship

  • Keys to cultural healing

This verse is a biblical example of why name matters and why losing the name results in losing the character — both for individuals and entire nations.


Song: Free Israel and Hagar’s Children

November 17, 2025


A song written by Trey Knowles for Palestinians and Israelites longing to be free from oppression and spiritual captivity. Free Israel and Hagar’s Children is a prophetic, spiritual anthem calling both Palestinians and Israelites to rise above the cycles of bondage, fear, and deception that have held them for generations. Written by Trey Knowles, the song urges the descendants of Abraham to awaken, recognize their shared heritage, and stand together against the schemes of darkness that fuel division and suffering. Through vivid Biblical imagery and emotional storytelling, the song highlights the intertwined pain of Israel and the children of Hagar, portraying both as caught in captivity—physical, emotional, and spiritual. It calls them to step into truth, compassion, and courage, refusing the lies that pit brother against brother. With themes of justice, mercy, and divine purpose, the song invites Jews, Christians, and Muslims alike to remember their common roots and walk a higher path of peace. Rising from lament into hope, Free Israel and Hagar’s Children proclaims that ancient wounds can be healed when unity overcomes hatred and when people stand firm against every scheme meant to keep them divided. Trey Knowles - Free Israel and Hagar’s Children is an Allegorical Message: - Hagar, the slave woman, represents the Old Covenant given at Mount Sinai. Her son Ishmael symbolizes those born into slavery under the law. - Sarah, the free woman, represents the New Covenant and the “Jerusalem above.” Her son Isaac symbolizes those born through God’s promise—free and heirs to the kingdom. A call for spiritual liberation—urging modern believers (perhaps metaphorically “Hagar’s children”) to embrace the freedom found in Christ. - A reflection on identity and covenant—exploring who truly belongs to the promise of God, beyond ethnic or legalistic boundaries. - A political or social commentary—possibly invoking the biblical metaphor to discuss modern issues related to Israel, freedom, or marginalized groups.


Song: Pray With Me

November 17, 2025


 

Trey Knowles – “Pray with Me”

In his powerful song “Pray with Me,” Trey Knowles delivers a heartfelt plea to the community—asking brothers and sisters across the nation to join him in prayer. His message is clear: the violence in America must stop. Trey speaks out against the rise in violence, particularly the way television and media programs desensitize our children to guns, aggression, and chaos. He reminds us that this behavior is not okay. This is not the spirit of God. With deep conviction, Trey Knowles calls on people of faith to unite in prayer—asking for healing, peace, and an end to the wickedness that threatens our communities. Through “Pray with Me,” he challenges us all to take a stand through faith and action. Together, through prayer and unity, we can restore love, compassion, and righteousness in our land.