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There is something about the Creation that always haunts me. Our own beginning within it was nearly six or seven thousand years ago. Yet the entire span of time after it might be viewed as only cluster of ages. My own life being placed at the end of these ages is inconspicuous. Nevertheless I sense there is a significance that links my life with Creation's earliest moments. When I search my feelings, I begin to think that all our lives began when the first worlds were born. I sense that our souls are timeless, and that our identities stretch from the first moments to our present. I imagine that everyone and everything was started with the initial chaos. Imagine yourself as the first thing created. Imagine that you are what is described with the first words in Genesis. If these described you, what could you imagine about that first day? How could you describe what is indescribable? You are left with only feelings. Feelings without intelligence. This book is a study into how these emotions have been transformed into our sense for spirituality.
Hammo'ad means "the appointed times." Its first reference is from Torah as the prescribed times for the Holy Festivals and Sabbath. This word was repeatedly used in the Salkinson-Ginsberg, "Hebrew New Testament," when referring to events in the Gospels of the Messiah. This Gospel publication is an English translation from that Hebrew text. It is also formulated as a combined narrative from the four Gospels as a single testimony. Along with this it is arranged with an historical order of their events. As such it permits the reader to better conceptualize the outlay of the Messiah's ministry. For comparative purposes, each verse is posted with its corresponding text from the Aramaic-Peshitta and Hebrew-Delitzsch New Testaments. Both of which are posted herein as Hebrew script. The purpose for their inclusion is to further emphasize the Jewish nature of this Gospel narrative.
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