This scholarly analysis explores the pervasive presence and influence of the Nephilim—giant, often demonic, offspring of fallen angels and human women—in biblical and historical narratives, particularly after the Great Flood. It argues that these entities, identified through various names like Anakites and Rephaites, persisted in post-diluvian societies, notably among nations like the Amalekites and Amorites. The text emphasizes that these Nephilim often usurped kingships, embodying tyranny and rebellion against God, as exemplified by figures like King Og and the infamous Nimrod, who sought to recreate the pre-Flood world's godless order through the Tower of Babel. Furthermore, the source posits that God's command for the Israelites to annihilate these nations, including the dramatic conquest of Jericho and David's defeat of Goliath and other giants, was a divine commission to cleanse the Promised Land of Nephilim corruption and establish a legitimate, God-ordained kingship.
The provided text explores the biblical narrative of giants and their perceived influence on ancient civilizations, particularly focusing on the Nephilim, Anakites, and Rephaites. It discusses their origins before and after the Great Flood, their role in establishing tyrannical kingships, and their conflict with the Israelites. The source connects these giants to various nations like the Amalekites and Amorites, describing their violent opposition to Israel's divinely mandated conquest of the Promised Land. Furthermore, it examines key figures such as Nimrod, King Saul, and King David, highlighting their interactions with these giant races and their fulfillment of God's command to eradicate them to establish a legitimate, God-ordained kingship for Israel.
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The Genesis Six Conspiracy: Section I
This extensive source explores a "Genesis 6 Conspiracy," proposing that ancient myths and biblical narratives, particularly the Nephilim story, reveal a hidden history of fallen angels procreating with human women to create a race of giants or "demigods."
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the Nephilim's primary objective in settling in the Land of the Covenant after the flood?
The Nephilim deliberately settled in the Land of the Covenant (Promised Land) after the flood to rebel against God and ambush the future nation of Israel. They positioned themselves geographically to impede Israel's divine destiny and thwart God's plan of salvation for humankind. They likely remembered God's intention to keep the land for Himself and bequeath it to Abraham's descendants, choosing this strategic location for their stand against God and the nascent nation of Israel.
How were the Nephilim connected to various postdiluvian nations and their leadership?
The Nephilim dominated the governments of several nations in and around the Land of the Covenant, including the Amalekites, Amorites, Hittites, Perizzites, Ammonites, Moabites, Edomites, Philistines, and Jebusites. While it's debated whether these were "pure" Nephilim nations or if Nephilim merely held their kingships, evidence suggests their significant influence. For instance, Anakite descendants (a type of Nephilim) were found among the Amalekites and Amorites. Powerful figures like King Sihon and Og were considered Rephaites (giants), and the Philistine "seranim" (rulers) were also described as giants, indicating Nephilim presence and leadership within these groups.
What was the significance of the war against giants predating the Amalekite and Amorite genealogical records?
An unexplained alliance of kings, likely from Mesopotamia, waged war against various giant nations (Rephaites, Zuzites, Emites, Horites) and also vanquished the Amalekites and Amorites. The timing of this battle predates the Amalekite and Amorite genealogical record in the Table of Nations, suggesting that these groups were already populated by giants even before their formal listing. This implies a widespread presence of Nephilim in these regions from very early in the postdiluvian world.
What was Nimrod's role in the early postdiluvian world and his connection to Nephilim ideologies?
Nimrod, a son of Cush, was the most influential figure in the early postdiluvian era. He was renowned as a mighty warrior and the first powerful king, conquering both men and animals. He is considered the first postdiluvian emperor, uniting kingdoms through tyranny and war. Nimrod was not a Nephilim by direct lineage according to the source, but rather a "Gibborim" (a powerful potentate or hero). However, he adopted and reintroduced the anti-God doctrines and spurious sciences of the antediluvian Nephilim, establishing a tyrannical, polytheistic religion centered on human strength and independence from God. He was seen as a leader who incited rebellion against God, even threatening to "slay God."
What was the purpose and nature of the Tower of Babel, and how was Nimrod involved?
The Tower of Babel was a collaborative project by the people of Shinar, instigated by Nimrod. Its purpose was to build a city with a tower reaching to the heavens, intended to "make a name for ourselves and not be scattered over the face of the earth." This project was not in honor of the true God; rather, it was a symbol of human self-reliance, unity independent of God, and a potential defense mechanism against a feared enemy (possibly the Nephilim themselves). Nimrod, as the tyrannical leader and first Masonic Grand Master, sponsored this undertaking, promoting spurious sciences and a state-sponsored religion that denied God's sole authority. God intervened by confusing languages and scattering the people to stop its completion.
What was the divine purpose behind God's command for Israel to eradicate certain nations in the Land of the Covenant?
God commissioned Israel to cleanse the Holy Land of the Covenant from people defiled by the Nephilim. These people were considered "terminally diseased" and beyond rehabilitation, similar to the antediluvian population that God eradicated with the flood. The "viciousness" of the conquest was not a general command for violence against all nations, but a specific long-term solution for the good of Israel and future humankind, preventing further corruption through sexual perversion, idolatry, and collaboration with Nephilim. Israel's failure to fully comply with this commission led to their own eventual destruction and ongoing struggles.
How did the conquest of Jericho serve as a symbolic and spiritual act?
Jericho, an ancient and heavily fortified city, was the first to be vanquished in the Land of the Covenant. Its destruction was not coincidental but a "special sacrifice to the Lord" and an example for all generations. The ritualistic nature of its fall, involving marching around the city and blowing trumpets for seven days during the Feast of Passover and Unleavened Bread, held deep symbolism. The removal of leavened bread (symbolizing pride and sin, associated with Nephilim corruption) during this period underscores the spiritual cleansing aspect. Jericho's fall demonstrated God's power to destroy the Nephilim's grip on humankind and their strongholds, regardless of their impressive defenses.
How did King David's reign fulfill Israel's divine commission, particularly regarding the Nephilim?
King David, a "warrior king," was chosen by God after King Saul's failure to fully eradicate the Amalekites, a Nephilim-influenced nation. David's commission was to subdue the remaining enemies of Israel and complete the 500-year task of exterminating the giants from the Land of the Covenant. His victories, including the legendary defeat of Goliath (a probable Nephilim/Gibborim potentate from Gath), legitimized his kingship as divinely sponsored, counteracting the false claims of Nephilim kingships. David's actions ensured an age of peace for Israel and established Jerusalem as its heart, paving the way for the building of the Temple by his son Solomon.
SECTION III: The Descendants of Anak – Bloodlines and Covenants
The genesis of Israel's struggle for the Promised Land was no mere territorial dispute; it was a cosmic confrontation. After the Israelite emergence from Egyptian bondage and their forty-year desert wandering, they were poised to claim their divine inheritance. Yet, the land, bestowed by divine decree upon Abraham's progeny for God's singular intentions, remained stubbornly occupied. Nations such as the Amalekites and Amorites, gripped by a suicidal fervor, aggressively opposed Israel's nascent nationhood. The terrifying truth quickly became undeniable: Nephilim – the monstrous progeny of antediluvian corruption – infested these Gentile strongholds.
These postdiluvian giants were unequivocally identified by the Israelites as Anakites and Rephaites, universally understood as direct descendants of the pre-deluge Nephilim. The term "Anak" itself translates to "a giant, or a long necked giant," while "Rephaim" means "spirits of the deceased or giant aborigines," designations reflecting their aberrant nature and ancient, unaccounted-for origins. Archaeological findings, often disregarded by "secular science," substantiate claims of tall, fair-skinned giants within these biblical lands.
The Codex Umbra reveals the true, insidious nature of their presence: these Nephilim were not mere inhabitants but the dominant force, controlling the governments of numerous nations, including the Amalekites, Amorites, Hittites, Perizzites, Ammonites, Moabites, Edomites, Philistines, and Jebusites. It is no coincidence; the Nephilim purposefully settled in and violated the Land of the Covenant post-deluge, a direct act of rebellion against the God who annihilated their antediluvian ancestors. Their strategic geographic alignment was a patient, clandestine ambush, designed to impede Israel's divine destiny and thwart God’s plan of salvation for humanity when Israel was at its weakest. This was a targeted subversion of God's chosen land, kept explicitly for His intentions and bequeathed to Abraham's lineage.
The Amorite and Amalekite Enigma: Giants in the Land
The Amalekites and Amorites, though shrouded in mystery and inexplicably intertwined with Anakites and Rephaites, stood out in their determined opposition. They were distinctively described as giants, separate from other nations. While Amorites are traced in the Table of Nations (Genesis 10) as descendants of Ham through Canaan and Sidon, the Amalekites' genealogy is conspicuously absent, a perplexing anomaly given their early appearance. Historically, Amorites were known as "westerners" or "western highlanders," wild, nomadic immigrants from the north, even viewed as "almost animals" by Mesopotamians. The Amalekites, however, possess no archaeological traces, as if they never existed, fueling theories of a merger with an "unknown" people to form the "Great Amalekite Race" or a new naming convention entirely. This stark lack of empirical evidence for a nation so central to Israel's tribulation is a glaring red flag for Codex Umbra analysis.
What is certain is the pervasive influence of giants within these nations. Anakites lived among both Amorites and Amalekites, producing a "mixed race of giants". These giants, echoing their antediluvian forebears, usurped kingships and seized absolute control, their physical superiority making them postdiluvian potentates. The Sumerian King's List itself testifies to kingship reverting to Nephilim after the deluge, a sinister echo of the past. Amorite and Amalekite kings were explicitly described as Anakites or Rephaites, "Anunnaki kings anointed from heaven by the fallen angels". The ancient Sumerian word for king, "big man" or "giants," is a chilling corroboration of their true nature.
Deuteronomy, Numbers, and Joshua consistently portray postdiluvian Nephilim (Rephaites and Anakites) as physically superior to Israelites. Their pervasive rule over the Amalekites and Amorites accounts for God's absolute edict of annihilation against these nations, equating their corruption and violence to that of the antediluvian world. This was not mere tribal warfare but a divinely ordained, generational purge, continuing until the time of David.
The Amorite narrative is a straightforward chronicle of Anakite subjugation. Sihon and Og, the formidable Anakite kings of the Amorites, reigned during Joshua's conquest. Og, described as the "last survivor of a race of giants" and confirmed flood survivor, implies an Anakite reign stretching back to the time of the deluge, approximately 1,500 years in Canaan and 2,000 years in Philistia. This vast, deliberate Nephilim reign has been conveniently swept aside by modern theology and secular history. Sihon, a figure of immense size and improbable dexterity, and his brother Og, a king of "godlike size, beauty, strength, and skill," were true demigods of extraordinary age, with Og's bed a chilling testament to his immense scale. Their lineage traces back to Shemyaza/Azaziel, chief of the Grigori, the very architects of the antediluvian Nephilim. Jewish legends even tell of Og clinging to Noah's Ark, a testament to his antediluvian survival, only to revert to his "wicked, antediluvian ways" after being freed from servitude by Abraham. Og's reign over Bashan, including the infamous Mount Hermon where fallen angels copulated with human women, firmly cements his status as a "true giant ruling potentate, a Gibborim and a Nephilim, from the antediluvian epoch".
The Anakites' deep entrenchment in the Promised Land by the Exodus is undeniable. The early postdiluvian epoch saw Anakites and Rephaites as the most prominent giant races, distinct though their exact relationship remains murky. Arba, the "greatest man amongst the Anakites," is credited as the forefather of Anak and the Anakite nation, with his namesake city, Hebron, a key giant stronghold. The absence of Arba, Anak, and Rapha from the Table of Nations is a profound detail, signifying their non-Noahic, Nephilim origin.
The term "Rephaites" broadly encompassed various giant groups: Emites (dispossessed by Moabites, name derived from fear), Zamzummites (loud "noisemakers," masters of war), Avvites (iniquitous giants among Philistines), and Auzim ("Shining People"). "Rephaites" also denotes "giant aborigines from much older races," whose appearance could cause a person's heart to weaken. Their "snake-like heads, rough and hairy skin, and eyes of honey and gold," coupled with an emanating glow, earned them the title "the Shining Ones". This suggests Rephaites were the true, primeval indigenous people of the Land of the Covenant, perhaps even predating the deluge. The definitive link between Anakites, Zamzummites, Horites, Emites, and Avvites to Rapha – more accurately, classifying them all as Rephaites – solidifies Rephaim as a root nation for postdiluvian Nephilim.
The re-emergence of Nephilim during Abraham's era is not a coincidence, foreshadowing the grand conflict with Israel centuries later. An unexplained alliance of Mesopotamian kings waged war against giant nations (Rephaites, Zuzites, Emites, Horites, Amalekites, Amorites), a war waged entirely against Nephilim-infested territories. This ancient conflict predates the Amalekite and Amorite genealogical records, providing a chilling temporal anomaly. Josephus, too, explicitly categorizes Amalekites and Amorites as giants within this Assyrian campaign, affirming their Nephilim saturation. The absence of Rephaites from the Table of Nations, unlike Noah's descendants, implies a different, non-Noahic origin, suggesting their "reappearance immediately after the deluge" and possible contact with Nimrod.
The connection between Nephilim and Sodom and Gomorrah is stark: the destruction of these cities occurred while Nephilim dwelt among their inhabitants. While direct biblical evidence is lacking, the sheer coincidence of Nephilim presence alongside Sodom's "vile corruption," "sexual immorality," and "perversion" (sins mirroring antediluvian Nephilim practices) points to a profound causal link. Gnostic perspectives even claim Sodom's destruction was due to its "wisdom and insights," implicating Nephilim as "enlightened purveyors of forbidden wisdom". It is logical to deduce that Nephilim were the root cause of Sodom's degeneration, perhaps even its founding city-states and centers of postdiluvian apostasy, where defiant fallen angels again procreated with human females. Gnostic gospels suggest a "second spiteful spectacle" of angelic copulation, creating new giants in cities where surviving antediluvian giants had coalesced.
Jewish legends shockingly claim Og, Abraham's slave gifted by Nimrod, founded sixty Amorite cities, including Sodom, Gomorrah, and the cities of the plain. These cities were "founded and governed by Nephilim," "Rephaite cities contaminated with the Incorruptible Race, the second-born race of antediluvian giants, Og and his kin, and the Nephilim-infested Amorites". The War of Four Kings Against Five was a large-scale military operation specifically against "Amorite/Canaanite (Nephilim and Amorite) cities of the plain," culminating in their annihilation and the taking of Lot hostage. The Amorites, "diluted giant-hybrids" and "tall ones," had interbred with Rephaites, producing hybrid kings and justifying God's ultimate disdain and their prophesied destruction.
The Amalekite anomaly deepens. Genesis 14 records them as a nation during Abraham's time, an impossibility if they descended from Esau (Abraham's great-grandson). This temporal paradox, combined with their classification as a Rephaite nation, points to their existence before Abraham's genealogy. The use of "ancient times" in 1 Samuel 27:8 concerning Amalekites refers to the pre-flood epoch, suggesting they were a race of giants existing "both before and after the flood". Numbers 13:23 further links Amalekites directly to the "descendants of Anak," implying they were Anakites themselves. The three Amalekite/Anakite kings of Hebron – Ahiman ("like standing beside a mountain"), Sheshai ("strong as marble"), and Talmai ("mighty strides that left plots," "big") – were direct sons of Anak, confirming their gigantic stature and Nephilim lineage. The fact that Numbers 24:20 describes Amalekites as the "first among nations" further implies their survival of the deluge, qualifying them as a true "Rephaite/aboriginal nation" independent of Noah's lineage. This confluence of evidence argues for Amalekites as a pure strain of surviving Nephilim.
The Horites, enigmatic "shadowy chieftains" and ancient people defeated by Chedorlaomer, are crucially linked to the Amalekites. Their listing in the Table of Nations without a paternal origin, coupled with Seir (the father of the Horites) not descending from anyone in Noah's lineage, implies a distinct, Nephilim chronology. Esau's descendants merged with these indigenous Horite giants of Seir, forming the "Great Amalekite Race". The name "Seir" ("rough skinned and hairy") directly mirrors the description of Nephilim, further connecting Horites, rebellious Edomites, and Nephilim. Esau's propensity for marrying Canaanite (Nephilim) wives and the intermarriage of his posterity with Horite/Nephilim females, like Timna and Ohilibamah, solidified this mixed bloodline, creating multiple branches of giants within the Edomite lineage and the "Great Amalekite Race". The very name "Amalek" itself may be derived from the peculiar original inhabitants of Seir, or even from an antediluvian giant named Amalek, twin brother to Samael. This exposes a deep, pervasive contamination of Abraham's lineage.
Jethro and Caleb: Unexplained Interventions
The presence of Jethro, Moses' father-in-law, and Caleb, a mysterious Kenizzite, unveils overlooked insights into the Nephilim/Israelite relationship. Jethro, a priest and prince of Midian, known by multiple names (Reuel, Hobab), was one of three famous high priests in Egypt, along with Job and Balaam. Job, from Uz in Seir, was possibly a Horite/Edomite, and Balaam, a Chaldean Magi, was hired to curse Israel. Balaam's oracle even foreshadowed the destruction of Amalekites and Kenites.
The profound revelation comes from Jethro's designation as a Kenite, a direct descendant of Cain, supposedly bearing the Mark of Cain as a tribal mark. This challenges conventional understanding that all humans save Noah's family perished in the deluge, suggesting the survival of Cain's descendants, the Kenites, possibly linked to Rephaim and Sethian Nephilim. This raises a chilling question: "did Moses actually marry a Nephilim or a Cainite Nephilim crossbreed named Zipporah?".
Caleb, a Kenizzite, further amplifies this paradox. As one of Moses' twelve spies, he was rewarded with the right to enter the Promised Land and, at age eighty-five, drove the Anakim from Hebron, their capital. It is "astounding" that a Kenizzite, a tribe with no Noahic genealogy, tracing mysteriously back to Cain and Nephilim, inherited Hebron, the Anakim's capital. Like Amalekites, Kenites existed before Esau and Abraham, further supporting their pre-Noahic, flood-surviving origins. Their metallurgical skills link them to Cain and Tubal-Cain, the "master metallurgist," who was "thought to be a Nephilim". Kenites lived among and were closely associated with Amalekites and Horites, suggesting a shared ancestry as "surviving Cainites descended from the people of day six". Caleb himself had Horite names in his genealogy.
The connection of Anak to Rapha to Nephilim is clear, and the survival of Nephilim is explicitly supported by Genesis and Mesopotamian legends. The interjection of pantheistic legends of Utnapishtim and Og, alongside the Gnostic "Incorruptible Race" (angelic/human hybrids), harmonizes these seemingly contradictory accounts, confirming that giants, Amalekites, and Kenites all survived the deluge. Gnostic gospels even record Noah denying responsibility for postdiluvian giants, despite his apostate descendants intermarrying with them. The "troublesome question" arises: what unexplained influence did Nephilim have upon Nimrod and the Tower of Babel?.
Nimrod: The Postdiluvian Tyrant and First Globalist
Nimrod, son of Cush, son of Ham, was arguably "the most influential and infamous individual in the early postdiluvian epoch". Born within seventy years of the flood, he likely received firsthand accounts of the antediluvian Nephilim-corrupted world from his grandfather, Ham. His biblical designation as a "mighty hunter before the Lord" is deceptive; it is not a compliment but an indictment, signifying a self-gratifying hunter who prioritizes his own desires at the expense of his victims, a stark contrast to the shepherd allegory of true kingship. This appellation allegorically connects to his "military-based mentality and his military-based government, which was characterized by absolute force and tyranny".
Nimrod was the first "mighty hero" and "powerful king" of the postdiluvian era, a "conqueror of both men and animals". His unconquerable strength and warrior prowess align him with the "tradition of the Nephilim," becoming the most powerful warrior king since the deluge. His name, Akkadian in origin, possibly derives from Ninurta, the Akkadian god of war and hunting, a "Nephilim son of Enlil and Ninlil". This linguistic symmetry suggests Nimrod saw himself as a Nephilim, at least in ambition. The Hebrew translation of Nimrod ("rebel, to rebel against, brave, and to subdue") perfectly embodies his character: a proud, brave potentate who modeled himself after antediluvian Nephilim, subduing people through tyranny and inciting rebellion against God.
Nimrod’s transformation from hunter to warrior was logical, yet disturbing so soon after the flood. Jewish legends describe him routing other princes and seizing absolute power, uniting the new kingdoms of the Euphrates valley under his tyrannical rule. He was the "absolute dictator of Sethian humankind at that time," leading them away from God and into a newly founded mystical religion. He desired a "one-world government, with a man as its god," becoming the "first universal king of the postdiluvian period, who was bent on heresy and the doctrines of the Antichrist". While his direct Nephilim lineage is rejected due to his listing in the Table of Nations, he "modeled himself after the great giant warrior kings". Early Christian writers even conceded Nimrod may have been Nephilim, fueling the transformation of his extraordinary human qualities into Nephilim.
The Tower of Babel: A Monument of Defiance and Reincarnated Corruption
The plain of Shinar, Nimrod's dominion, was an alternative name for Sumer, resonating with an "antediluvian déjà vu". The people's decision to settle there, refusing to spread out as commanded by God, stemmed from a "fear of the unknown" or perhaps fear of "another civilization that was terrible in war" – potentially the Nephilim. Nimrod united them through tyranny, ruling as an "autocratic maker of laws" and "unrestricted sovereign power," a "tyrant king" who abused his powers. He introduced idol worship, teaching his subjects to believe in themselves and their own works, rejecting God's authority – the "very same sin the antediluvian giants and the Cainites of day six were recorded as committing". This doctrine, mirroring the pantheistic polytheism of the antediluvian era, relegated the true God to a lower status among many deities.
Nimrod, likely deluded by fallen angels, Jinn, demons, or Nephilim (or even Hermes), promoted the lie that God was a violent, intolerant deity responsible for the flood, a Gnostic teaching that demonizes the God of Jews and Christians as "Ialdaboth". The Tower of Babel was the "full spurious glory" of this delusion. Its construction was not merely symbolic; it was a "monument of respect or defiance, or both," directed at false gods and memorializing their rebellion against the true God. It was an act of "self-glory and a statement of independence," marking the "rebirth of the antediluvian epoch of corruption, debauchery, and rebellion". This immense undertaking, an "enormous burden," necessitated Nimrod's tyrannical enslavement of the people of Shinar.
The "new Babylon religion" aimed for a unified world, a "new Atlantis," where "nothing was to be impossible for them". This utopian vision, independent of God, served as a parallel to the "end time’s prophetic warning known as The Sign of Noah". God's intervention was a necessity; the world was dangerously close to backsliding into the "absolute violence, corruption, debauchery, apostasy, and rebellion" of the pre-flood era, justifying the great angelic rebellion. By confusing languages and scattering humanity, God prevented total dictatorial rule until the "new Babel" of the last days.
The tower's purpose was multifaceted: to provide identity and security, honor false gods, demonstrate rebellion against the true God, and project strength against perceived enemies – implicitly, the Nephilim. Josephus records Nimrod's blasphemous intent to build a tower high enough for refuge from another flood and to ascend to heaven to "avenge both the people and himself through slaying the one who had caused the great flood". Nimrod even "staged events where he shot arrows into the heavens in an attempt to slay God". This was a deliberate "symbolic gesture of his intention to rebel against God in the spirit of The Genesis 6 Conspiracy," a monument to the antediluvian Nephilim and their epoch. Nimrod, painting God as an "iniquitous and violent" deity, "seemed larger than life," appearing as a messiah to his followers.
His lament over his "fallen, idolized demigods and the descendants of Cain" solidifies his Nephilim sympathies. The "new doctrines" included "renewed enlightenment, the ancient knowledge and beliefs of Atlantis and the entire antediluvian world, the occult, idolatry, secret rituals, and secret societies". Those who resisted were "callously removed, likely by death," foreshadowing end-time genocides. Nimrod's followers even "drank blood, just as the Nephilim did," demonstrating a purposeful modeling of his society after antediluvian Nephilim empires or coexisting postdiluvian ones.
The evidence points to Nephilim coexisting with Nimrod, whom he likely "warred with regularly," earning his heroic status. The Tower was a "warning and sign to the Nephilim of the people of Shinar’s capabilities and as a witness to their newfound allegiance to the pantheon". Aztec and Choula legends, which remarkably parallel the Babel narrative, explicitly state "gigantic men" or "white giants" built these towers, directly linking Nephilim as partners and co-conspirators in the rebellion. The "History of the Armenians" supports this, noting Nimrod "enlisted giants to build the mountain-like Tower at Babel". Mesopotamian tradition records Babel as a center of "postdiluvian Anunnaki" activity. This unfiltered analysis demands the conclusion: Nimrod partnered with some Nephilim to construct Babel City, the tower, and a temple honoring the antediluvian Nephilim and Cainites. While Nimrod "did not tame all the Nephilim" and warred against some, he clearly subdued others, subjugating them for his grand project. Armenian legends of Nimrod fighting "rival giant armies" further support his involvement with Nephilim.
Nimrod and the Secret Sciences: The Rebirth of the Occult
The means by which Nimrod accessed this forbidden knowledge is chillingly clear: Hermes, the translator of "Enoch’s hieroglyphs" etched into Lamech’s children's twin towers. This "degenerate data" of "spurious knowledge and Nephilim" fell into Nimrod’s hands, leading him to reactivate it "with all his heart and all his soul," making anything "attainable" despite lacking "heavenly wisdom".
Craft legends cement Nimrod's role as a "Mason" who "loved" the "spurious sciences," becoming the "first Masonic Grand Master for the postdiluvian world". He "paraded the postdiluvian world into disaster," organizing and fusing a "newly founded cult with the elite of society, forming a transgenerational secret society". He was honored for creating postdiluvian Masonry, ruining society "in one quick stroke of diabolical genius" with the "terrible evils that caused the demise of the antediluvian epoch".
Nimrod's construction of cities and ziggurats, particularly Babel, solidified his credentials as a "Master Mason," utilizing over a thousand Masons indoctrinated in these sciences. This founding Masonic organization, the "ultra-secret Great White Brotherhood," flowed through history to Heliopolis, the Essenes, and ultimately, the "super-secret Illuminati". Babel was the "first Masonic project of the postdiluvian world," the "beginning of modern Freemasonry, including mysticism," a "glory of the renaissance of the antediluvian sciences".
Babel was a Mesopotamian ziggurat, its knowledge sourced from "antediluvian Sumerians" and the "spurious sciences," mirroring the pyramids. Sumerians, descendants of Cain, were attributed with early writing (cuneiform) and a technological revolution (agriculture, mathematics, metallurgy, architecture), dedicating these skills to worship their gods via ziggurats. Babel was consecrated to Enki, the rival of Enlil/Adonai, serving as a "gateway to the gods," a "star gate" for communication and manipulation. This aligns with modern science fiction interpretations, reinforcing the ancient connection.
Babel was a direct "postdiluvian recreation of Mount Hermon," an "open invitation for the previously unimpassioned watchers to descend upon the earth to once more take daughters of men as their wives, to once more create new Nephilim, the new man". Nimrod's hubris, his claim to be a god, and the establishment of a "parallel kingdom to that of the future Antichrist" where "war, violence, and murder were common". He converted nations to his religion, setting up a throne in imitation of God's, with all nations paying him homage. God's confusion of tongues and dispersion was a direct retribution to impede this "spurious craft".
Even after the dispersion, Nimrod persisted, reestablishing his ancient Babylonian empire through his Masonic knowledge, building cities and perpetuating the spurious sciences through the Chaldean mathematicians and Magi. These "sons of Nimrod" were aggressive, warlike, and became idolatrous fire worshippers, casting dissenters into furnaces – a chilling precursor to Hitler and the future Antichrist. Legends even claim Nimrod attempted to burn Abraham. Nimrod's tyrannical beginnings persisted, ensuring the "spurious knowledge" flourished, waiting to spread its corruption. His empire was a "fierce aggressiveness," a model for brutal Assyrian warrior kings, making Assyria "the land of Nimrod". His death in battle with T'orgom, a giant, underscores his violent end. Nimrod is indeed a "worthy role model for the coming Antichrist," his story a "witness warning all generations" of the returning "spirit of sedition and rebellion known as The Genesis 6 Conspiracy".
Israel in Egypt and the Conquest of the Promised Land: A Cleansing Edict
Israel's 400-year bondage in Egypt was a deliberate rearing, designed to forge a nation from "ragtag collection of slaves" indoctrinated in polytheism, with only faint echoes of monotheism remaining. Their initial refusal to enter the Promised Land due to fear of the "fearsome people of war" (Nephilim-infested nations) necessitated God's forty years of desert discipline. The golden calf incident, a relapse into polytheism and a symbol of the bull cult of Canaan and Atlantis (antediluvian mysticism), explicitly exposed their "fragile faith".
God's judgment on these nations was a continuation of His antediluvian decree. The Israelite conquest was not merely territorial acquisition but a divine commission to "eradicate the Nephilim corruption from His land and creation, saving humankind from their curse". The list of nations God promised to drive out conspicuously omits Nephilim nations and Amalekites, whom He "segregated for both an extraordinary and extreme form of eradication". Israel's chosen route, avoiding the powerful Philistines, indicates strategic divine guidance to build confidence before facing the "dragon’s lair of powerful Nephilim".
The Amalekites, branded as "people of the east" and allied with Midians, initiated unprovoked attacks against a vulnerable, militarily unprepared Israel. Edom, Ammon, and Moab, Abrahamic nations free from Nephilim infestation, were deliberately bypassed by Israel, highlighting the "conspicuous, generational war with Nephilim by God’s chosen people". The Canaanite king of Arad, a city near Hebron (Anakite stronghold), initiated a causeless attack, strongly implying "fugitive Nephilim" involvement. Israel's victory, renaming the place "Hormah" ("destruction"), was a prophetic foreshadowing of the giants' fate.
The Amorites, illegally occupying the Land of the Covenant, strategically positioned Sihon and Og's kingdoms as barriers to Israel's entry, reflecting the "generational war waged between the demonically sponsored Nephilim and the people of God’s Covenant". Israel's stunning victories over Sihon and Og instilled "mortal grip of fear" in the remaining Amorite, Canaanite, and Philistine nations. Moses' final act of vengeance against the Midianites, who allied with Sihon, further solidified Israel's role as God's instrument of judgment.
The Amorite/Canaanite nations west of the Jordan, strategically controlling essential mountain roads, were infested with various Canaanite sects, including Jebusites (another Canaanite sect). Canaanite society, akin to ancient Greek city-states, worshipped a trinity led by El, a "bloody tyrant" and "lustful and morbid character" who was "part of the celestial mafia of watchers". Canaanite kings, descending from demigod offspring (Nephilim) of El and Baal, considered themselves "living gods," offering "strong evidence that Nephilim were the kings of all the Canaanite nations". Israel systematically vanquished these Anakite and Amorite nations, including Jericho, Ai, Jerusalem, Hebron, and others, conquering a staggering thirty-one (Nephilim) kings. Joshua purged the remaining Anakite refugees, though some Rephaites and Canaanites with iron chariots still remained. Caleb, the mysterious Kenizzite, was awarded Hebron, the Anakite capital, due to his devotion.
Jericho: The First Fruits of Annihilation
Jericho, a city dating back 11,000 years, believed by some to be the "oldest city in the world," was chosen for a "special sacrifice to the Lord," its destruction a profound symbolic act. Its vanquishing through "inexplicably odd rituals and ceremony" – marching, silence, and the blast of trumpets – was not coincidental. The "ritual of the seven trumpets" symbolized "the renewal of all things," with Jericho as the "first fruits of the Covenant Land, offered to God in a holy ritual".
The timing was deliberate: the battle commenced during the Feasts of Passover and Unleavened Bread, with the trumpets beginning on the first day of Passover. The removal of leavened bread, symbolizing pride, haughtiness, and sin (and by extension, Nephilim as the cause of antediluvian corruption), underscores the profound symbolism. The city's complete leveling, burning, and slaughter of all inhabitants (save Rahab) was consistent with a "burnt offering to the Lord," its treasure earmarked for God's treasury, and a curse pronounced on any who would rebuild it. This was a clear example to the world of what would befall "all Nephilim-infested cities of the Promised Land".
Jericho's "great age," immense walls, and deep ditch suggest defenses against something formidable, linking back to Cain's fortified cities and Uruk in Sumerian mythology. Archaeological evidence suggests Jericho traded with "watchers of Lake Van". Jericho was a "city linking antediluvian times with postdiluvian times," potentially a "defiant shrine to the violent antediluvian age plagued by Nephilim and watchers". Its walls symbolically represented the antediluvian wars and the "antediluvian earth" itself. Thus, Jericho's destruction by Joshua figuratively mirrors the destruction of the antediluvian world by the flood and its subsequent renewal through Noah, marking the "official start to the eradication of the surviving antediluvian contagion".
The symbolic nature of this destruction, with trumpets signifying renewal, war, and judgment, rendered the pantheon's gods "silent and conspicuous by their absence," revealing their subservience to the one true God. This demonstrated God's power over the Nephilim grip on humankind, preparing to act once more.
The Amalekites' Destruction: A Generational Blood Vow Fulfilled
The elusive Amalekites, conspicuously absent from historical records, represent a profound mystery. Their initial, cowardly ambush of a "spiritually weak and vulnerable nation" of Israelites, who were "in no way a military match," proves their intent to strike before Israel could gain strength. If Amalekites were Abraham's pure seed, they had no reason to fear Israel; therefore, their attack proves they were a "Nephilim nation". Their relentless hostility, obsession with spreading rumors against Israel, and inciting other nations to war against "foreigners" reveals a deep-seated enmity. This hatred could only be explained by the deception of "Nephilim and their procreators, the angels of rebellion," who provided false confidence.
The Amalekites, from the beginning, swore a "blood covenant to eradicate Israel from the face of the earth," a vow that permeated "all the Nephilim-dominated nations". Esau, the patriarch of Amalek, born "evil" and losing his birthright, made a deathbed wish for Amalek to destroy Israel, demonstrating a generational hatred. His "godlessness" and "sexual transgressions" (marrying Horite/Nephilim females) are linked to the "sexual sins of dark angels that created the Nephilim," infusing the Amalekite lineage with this innate malevolence. Their "cowardly terrorism" – ambushing, murdering, and mutilating, while mocking Abraham's covenant – reveals their "despicable warfare tactics". Their "black magic" during battle, coupled with their "false shield of protection afforded to them by their false gods," underscores their Nephilim-influenced defiance of the true God.
God declared perpetual war against the Amalekites, vowing to "completely blot out the memory of Amalek from under heaven". This was not mere punishment but "equitable" retribution for their attempt to "destroy them [Israel] as a nation, that the name of Israel be remembered no more". Their brutality, supported by Josephus and linked to the undocumented, flood-surviving Girzites and Geshurites (Nephilim tribes), further cements their vile nature. Agag, the Amalekite king captured by Saul, was a giant, an "Anakite". The "Agagite title was a proud declaration of Amalekite heritage worn proudly by Amalekite/Nephilim kings". The astonishing fact that Haman the Agagite, centuries later, continued this "blood war" against Judah, proves this "blood oath" was "encoded into the Amalekite DNA by virtue of its generational ferocity". This "simmering hatred" has manifested in "genocide and holocaust" throughout millennia, targeting Israel and Judah, and will be rekindled in the last days by "descendants and wannabe descendants of the Nephilim races".
The judgment of "utter destruction" and blotting out their memory was divine justice. This judgment extended to "all the Nephilim nations of the Middle East" allied with Amalek. While Saul initiated the purge, his "mercy and empathy" in sparing Agag and prized animals, a violation of God's edict, cost him his kingdom and Messianic lineage, which was transferred to David. David, fulfilling his judicial obligation, completed the extermination of the Amalekites, fulfilling the prophecy of "endless ruin" and their name being "blotted out forever and ever". The Amalekite remnant was lost to history, their existence maintained solely by the Bible as a witness.
The true identity of the lost Amalekite nation: they were "part of the Horites," dwelling in Seir. Seir's name, "hairy," mirrors the Nephilim's description, further linking them. Amalekites were an "ancient nation" existing from "ancient times" (pre-flood). They were a "pure Anakite strain before merging with Amalek" (Esau's descendant), a "distinct but separate branch of the Rephaim," possibly another "surviving remnant of antediluvian Nephilim," with "Seir as the founding father". The discovery of the antediluvian giant Amalek, twin brother to Samael (whose wife, Naamah, was "mother of demons" and sister to Tubal-Cain), ties the Amalekite origin directly to Nephilim and Cainites. Anam' Melech (Molech), a Babylonian deity requiring child sacrifice, is identified as yet another variant of Amalek/Lamech, a "Nephilim demigod of barbaric proportions". This is the unfiltered, raw truth of their heritage.
King Saul and David: The Royal Bloodline's Burden
God's decree for an Israelite king was precise: not a foreigner, no great wealth accumulation, no return to Egypt, no polygamy, and humility – a direct opposition to the principles of Nephilim kings. Saul, chosen for his military record, captured the tablets of the Law from Goliath. He was a large, handsome, and modest man, yet Samuel warned against kingship, knowing it would lead to war and tyranny. Saul's name, Labaya, connects him to Lab'Ayyu, a powerful prince who expanded his empire, possibly through alliances with the Apiru (Hebrews).
Saul's ultimate removal as king was directly due to his failure to "utterly destroy the Amalekites from under heaven". Despite his anointing, Saul was "too mild a ruler" and violated his covenant by sparing King Agag (a giant) and valuable livestock, demonstrating a lack of total commitment to God's genocidal edict. This act had long-reaching consequences, triggering the later persecution of Jews by Haman the Agagite. Consequently, God stripped the right of succession from Saul's lineage, transplanting the Messianic bloodline and everlasting throne to the tribe of Judah through David. Ironically, Saul's sparing of Amalekites contributed to his own demise, as his Amalekite vassal army later betrayed him, leading to his death in battle. Samuel confirmed Saul's downfall for his disobedience, explicitly stating God "turned the kingdom over to David". David completed the Amalekite destruction, fulfilling the divine judgment, and securing his kingship.
Goliath: The Nephilim Challenge to the Throne
The "David and Goliath" narrative, often romanticized, is a pivotal moment revealing the struggle between the Davidic throne and Nephilim kingships, intertwined with "royal bloodlines, and the bloodlines of the Antichrist". The Philistines, Israel's "greatest militaristic threat" and a Nephilim-led force, constantly harassed Israel, driven by a "bloodthirsty oath".
Goliath, the giant from Gath, was not merely a large warrior; he was the epitome of the Nephilim challenge. His daily defiance and challenge to single combat was a "corrosive challenge" designed to humiliate Israel. David, chosen for his heart and zeal for God, was a "warrior king, selected to subdue the enemies of Israel," fulfilling Israel's violent Covenant obligations. David, with blood on his hands from countless battles and even conspiracy to murder, was "executing the divine judgment of God," a precursor to the Messiah's future wrath. His role was the "Lion trait," while Solomon, the king of peace, was the "Lamb aspect," foreshadowing the Messiah's dual nature.
The Goliath narrative is not a myth; it "oozes with context and relationships of all that is important in the Old Testament," directly related to the Nephilim and the unexplained Avvites. Shockingly, Jewish legends claim Goliath was David's cousin, the grandson of Orpah, a Moabite princess. Goliath's colossal stature (over nine feet tall) and immense armor (breastplate weighing 125 pounds, spear point fifteen pounds) confirm his gigantic nature. His birth to Orpah, along with four other giants, signifies Philistia was "brimming with iniquitous giants".
Goliath was a "Nephilim/Gibborim," one of the five potentates ruling the Philistine city-states (Ashod, Ashkelon, Ekron, Gaza, and Gath). Joshua, during the conquest, deliberately left a "remnant" of Nephilim in these five Philistine kingdoms. The books of 2 Samuel and 1 Chronicles confirm Gath as the "land where the descendants of Rapha lived," making Goliath's Nephilim identity undeniable. The Philistine rulers were known as "seranim," a term linked etymologically to the Greek "tyrannos" (tyrant) and "gyges" (giant), definitively identifying the Avvite kings as giants. Goliath, as a Gittite, was king of Gath.
Goliath's challenge was a direct "revenge for Saul embarrassing Goliath previously, when Saul retrieved the tablets of the Law from Gath". David's youth and direct approach, fueled by disdain for this "creature worse than a dog" (a description reserved for "vilest of people and demons"), underscored his faith. The selection of "five smooth stones" was no accident; it was David's preparedness to kill "all five Nephilim warrior kings" – Goliath, Ishi-Benob, Saph, Lahmi, and Sippai – who were all present as reigning potentates. The sling, a formidable weapon capable of accurate long-range destruction, proved decisive.
David's Rise and the Eradication of Nephilim: The Final Purge
David's anointing as king at Hebron/Kiriath Arba, the "infamous capitol for Anak," was a deliberate, provocative act against the Nephilim. His elite force, "David's mighty men," were "treasonous cutthroats" assembled to fulfill "God’s plans to eliminate Nephilim kingships from the Promised Land". The Philistines, recognizing the threat, immediately attacked David in the "Valley of Rephaim, or Valley of the Giants," where David delivered a "punishing blow".
The Avvites and Hivites, tribes often associated or linked with Philistines, were related to Horites/Hurrians, suggesting a Nephilim/Horite ethnic subdivision that interbred with Canaanites. Their claims of traveling from a "distant country" echo the Philistines' origin from Caphtor (Crete). Philistines, a non-Semitic race descended from Aryans (Titans from Atlantis), possessed "formative and direct Nephilim bloodlines". Egyptian reliefs depict them as tall, Hellenic-looking people. Their control of the "original iron trade," mastery of smelting (a secret technology they hoarded), gave them a fierce military advantage, exemplified by their iron chariots. This iron technology, traceable to Tubal-Cain (a Nephilim) and dating back to antediluvian times, further links them to the Genesis 6 conspiracy.
The five Philistine potentates were the ruling Seranim. The Bible explicitly records the deaths of the four remaining giant potentates – Ishi-Benob, Saph, Lahmi (Goliath's brother), and the six-fingered/six-toed giant – all confirmed as "descendants of Rapha in Gath," making them "Nephilim, pure and simple—end of story". The apparent contradiction of Elhanan killing Goliath is resolved by 1 Chronicles, confirming Elhanan slew Lahmi, Goliath's brother. David's original name may have been Elhanan, or "Davidum," a Hurrian title meaning "beloved of Yahweh" or "leader". His mercenary work for the Philistine King Achish, fighting Amalekites, further built his reputation.
The Goliath narrative, far from being coincidental, was a central component of Israel's 500-year commission to "eradicate the Nephilim plague from the face of the earth". Saul and David's commission to eliminate these giants provided "legitimacy to their kingship". Kingship, having descended from the gods to the Anunnaki/Nephilim, was usurped by David's dynasty, making his "the only legitimate throne on earth that was authorized from heaven". This explains the desperate attempts by other "spurious royal bloodlines" and the end-time false messiah to connect themselves to David.
The Nephilim, though relegated to obscurity in modern Christianity, had a profound impact on ancient history, both pre- and post-flood. Their heritage persists, intertwining with Messianic bloodlines, all culminating in the "contemporary Age of Aquarius," which will witness the "reincarnated spirit of The Genesis 6 Conspiracy in its boldest array of sedition". This is not simply history; it is a blueprint for the coming chaos.
Detailed Timeline
Pre-Flood Epoch (Ancient Times - Before the Deluge):
Before Noah's Flood: Nephilim exist as a race of giants, dominating various peoples. The Amalekites are believed to exist as a race of giants during this time.
Day Six (Creation): Hunters regularly dine on wild game, suggesting a non-vegetarian diet among some groups.
Antediluvian Nephilim Corruption: The world is corrupted by Nephilim, leading to widespread violence and sin, mirroring the debaucheries of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Building of Cities: Cain builds the cities of Enoch and sixty other fortified cities. Uruk is a mighty city in Sumerian mythology during this time.
Rephaite Nations: Rephaite nations are established, making a significant impression on the people.
Greek Titans: Antediluvian Greek Titans like Hercules and Theseus are known for their enormous size and fleetness of foot.
Origins of Philistines: Philistines are described as a non-Semitic race, possibly descending from Aryans (Titans from Atlantis), suggesting early Nephilim bloodlines.
Iron Smelting Knowledge: Philistines are skilled in iron smelting secrets before 1400-1450 B.C.E., possibly learning from or defeating the Hittites who also used iron around this time.
Minoan Civilization: Crete and Santorini are home to the Minoans, known for smelting bronze and metal, home of the labyrinth and Minotaur, and the bull cult of Poseidon. Minos, a Nephilim son of Europa and Zeus, is part of this.
Cain's Descendants: Kenites are believed to be descendants of Cain and are associated with the "Mark of Cain."
Pre-Flood Amalekites: The Amalekites, like Kenites, existed as a nation before Abraham's time and before Esau's birth, implying their pre-flood origin.
Divine Judgment: God brings forth the flood to eradicate Nephilim corruption, saving humankind from their curse.
Early Post-Flood Epoch (Less than 400 years after the flood):
God's Covenant with Noah: God establishes an everlasting covenant with Noah, symbolized by the rainbow, promising never to destroy the earth by water again.
Dietary Shift: God permits Noah and his descendants to eat meat, though Noah remains a vegetarian. Meat likely becomes a staple in the time of Cush, Nimrod's father.
Birth of Nimrod: Nimrod, son of Cush, is likely born within seventy years of the flood.
Alliance of Kings (Mesopotamia): An unexplained alliance of kings, likely from Mesopotamia, wages war against kings from the plain of Sodom.
War Against Giants: This alliance battles Rephaites in Ashteroth, Zuzites in Ham, Emites in Shaveh Kiriathaim, and Horites in Seir – all described as "giant nations." The Amalekites and Amorites are also vanquished in this war, suggesting they were also giants. This predates their genealogical record in the Table of Nations.
Nephilim in Sodom and Gomorrah: The presence of Nephilim in Sodom and Gomorrah is implied, linking their corruption to the sins that led to the cities' destruction.
Nimrod's Rise to Power: Nimrod grows to be a mighty warrior and the first mighty hero mentioned in postdiluvian Genesis. He is described as a conqueror of both men and animals, possessing unconquerable strength.
Political Unification & Tyranny: Jealousy erupts among the princes (Phenech, Johkan, and Nimrod) appointed by Noah's descendants. Nimrod's army routes Phenech's, and Nimrod seizes absolute power, making Johkan and Phenech subservient. He later unites the kingdoms of the Euphrates valley after the Babel dispersion.
Nimrod's Empire: Nimrod establishes an empire, founding many cities. Accad and three other cities are the beginning of his post-Babel empire.
Nimrod's Religion and Rebellion: Nimrod changes his government to tyranny, leading people away from God and into rebellion. He establishes a new mystical religion, fostering dependence on himself. He is depicted as inciting people to rebel against God, threatening to slay God if necessary, and promoting the idea of God as one of many gods.
Tower of Babel Construction: Nimrod persuades the people of Shinar to build a city and a tower to reach the heavens, to make a name for themselves and avoid scattering. This project is not in honor of God but rather a symbol of rebellion and a desire for security independent of God.
God's Intervention at Babel: God confuses the languages of the people at Babel, stopping the construction of the tower and scattering the people across the globe. Nimrod remains in Assyria and Babylon, continuing to build cities and attempting to rebuild his world empire.
Sargon the Great: Sargon the Great (c. 23rd-24th century BCE) founds or inherits the dynasty of Accad, conquering Sumerian homeland and forming an empire. He maintains Nephilim ruling families at his court.
Job's Time: Job, a very wealthy and blameless man from Uz in Seir, is potentially a famous priest during the time of the Exodus, or at least during this early post-flood period, known for his faith and wisdom.
Abrahamic Period:
God Guides Abraham: God guides Abraham from Ur (a center of moon worship) to the Land of the Covenant, knowing it is infested with Nephilim. This is seen as God's intention to use Israel to eradicate Nephilim corruption.
God's Covenant with Abraham: God binds the land into a Covenant with Abraham, bequeathing it to his descendants.
Abraham and Sarah's Renaming: Abram and Sarai are renamed Abraham and Sarah by God, marking their reclamation from polytheism.
Abraham and Melchizedek: Abraham inherits priestly blessings from Melchizedek (Shem) after confronting Nimrod.
Sodom and Gomorrah's Destruction: God judges and destroys Sodom, Gomorrah, and companion cities of the plain with fire and brimstone due to their sexual immorality, idolatry, violence, and collaboration with Nephilim.
Exodus and Conquest of the Promised Land:
Moses' Era: Moses leads the Israelites out of Egypt.
Moses Seeks Passage: Moses requests safe passage for the Israelites through the land of Anakite King Sihon. Sihon refuses, displaying his inherited hubris and ancestral covenant against God.
Battle with Midianites: Moses leads the Israelites in battle against the Midianites, executing their five kings (Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, Reba) for allying with King Sihon against Israel.
Victories East of Jordan: Israel achieves "mind-boggling victories" east of the Jordan, capturing territories from Sihon (Gorge of Arnon) and Og (Mount Hermon, including Bashan). This instills terror in surrounding nations.
Crossing the Jordan & Jericho: Joshua leads the Israelites across the Jordan. Jericho, an ancient city, is the first city vanquished in the Covenant Land.
Siege and Fall of Jericho: For six days, Israel's armed men and priests carrying ram's horns march around Jericho once daily. On the seventh day, they march seven times, blow trumpets, and shout, causing the walls to collapse. The Israelites slaughter all occupants (except Rahab and her family) and destroy the city. Joshua pronounces a curse on anyone who rebuilds it.
Conquest of Southern Canaan: Joshua defeats the five southern Amorite kings and takes Makkedah, Libnah, Lachish (defeating King Japhia and King Horam), Hebron, Eglon, Debir, and the Anakite region of Negev, leaving no survivors. These cities are described as Amorite and infested with Anakites.
Northern Alliance Defeated: Northern Amorite King Jabin of Hazor forms a gigantic alliance with kings Jobab, Shimron, Acshaph, northern mountain kings, Arabah kings, Canaanites, Hittites, Perizzites, Jebusites, and Hivites of Mizpah. Joshua and the Israelites soundly defeat them at the waters of Merom.
Philistine Presence: The Philistines, residing in Gaza (south and west towards the Mediterranean), continue to be a "continual thorn" to Israel throughout the period of Judges due to the Nephilim (Avvites) dwelling among them. Joshua does not attack the Philistines.
Israel's Covenant Violations: Israel's failure to totally fulfill their covenant obligations (to cleanse the land of Nephilim-defiled people) leads to ongoing problems and apostasy.
Period of Judges and Kings (Saul and David):
Judges Period: Philistines incessantly antagonize Israelites with continuous incursions and insults.
Abimelech Destroys Baal-Berith: Israelite judge Abimelech destroys the House of Baal-Berith in Shechem around 1150 B.C.E.
Israel Asks for a King: As Samuel ages and his sons prove unfit, the people of Israel ask God for a king to lead them like other nations.
Saul Chosen as King: Saul is chosen as king, noted for his military record (capturing the tablets of the Law from Goliath), strength, handsome appearance, and being a head taller than others. He is anointed king by Samuel.
Saul's Commission and Failure: Samuel recommissions Israel, through Saul, to obliterate the Amalekites (men, women, children, infants, and livestock). Saul only fights the Amalekites because he is forced to, and he fails to carry out God's command precisely, sparing spoils of war. This disobeys his covenant with God.
David's Emergence: A young David intercedes in Israel's destiny, confronting the Philistines.
David and Goliath: Goliath, a Gittite from Gath and a Philistine warrior leader (believed to be a Nephilim/Gibborim potentate), challenges Israel to single combat. David, armed with a sling and five smooth stones, slays Goliath. This act is central to David's rise.
David's Military Feats: David slays 200 Philistines to marry Michal. He develops an elite force of "mighty men" in exile, who are "treasonous cutthroats" in the eyes of Egypt, to fulfill God's plan to eliminate Nephilim kingships.
David Becomes King: After Saul's death, David is anointed king of Judah at Hebron (infamous capital for Anak), and later king of all Israel at Hebron.
David Completes Commission: David fulfills Israel's Covenant obligations through violence and war, subduing the remaining enemies of Israel and securing an age of peace. He is described as a "warrior king" executing divine judgment.
Extermination of Nephilim: David completes the extermination of the Nephilim in Gaza and defeats the Amalekites and other antagonizing nations (Jebusites, Moabites). Psalm 9:4-8 is interpreted as referring to the blotting out of the Amalekite name.
Jerusalem Established: David establishes Jerusalem as the heart and soul of Israel.
Solomon's Reign: Solomon, David's son, becomes a peaceful king of wisdom and is permitted to build the holy temple, unlike David who had blood on his hands.
King Rehoboam and Jeroboam: King Rehoboam, Solomon's successor, goes to Shechem to be crowned. King Jeroboam rebels and refortifies Shechem as the capital of the northern nation of Israel.
Later History:
Destruction of Israel and Judah: Israel is destroyed by the Assyrians in 721 B.C.E. and Judah by the Babylonians in 587 B.C.E. due to covenant violations, idolatry, and continued defilement by remaining "infected people."
Roman Dispersion: The Romans disperse Judah to the four corners of the globe for non-belief, rejecting Jesus, killing prophets, and breaking the Law.
Ongoing Feud: The blood oath against Israel and Judah continues to simmer through millennia, fueled by groups like Assyrians, Babylonians, Romans, corrupted Christian and Muslim nations, and Nazis.
Future Prophecy: The Amalekite hatred and dedication to wipe Israel and Judah from memory will be stoked again in the last days by end-time Babylon, the world government, and the Antichrist (descendants and wannabe descendants of Nephilim races). The future "modern Nimrod" will be a mighty warrior before God. Jesus, from David's bloodline, will ultimately defeat Satan and his cohorts and judge fallen angels.
Cast of Characters
Divine/Supernatural Beings:
God (Yahweh/Lord): The supreme creator who divides the nations, bequeaths the Promised Land to Israel, establishes covenants (with Noah, Abraham, Israel), judges corruption, and commissions Israel to eradicate Nephilim. He confuses languages at Babel and sends angels to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah.
Sons of God: Divine beings who influenced the division of nations and whose sexual perversion with human women led to the Nephilim.
Fallen Angels/Jinn/Demons: Entities believed to have deluded Nimrod and fostered his pantheon of gods, influencing him to believe they would protect him from God.
Angels of God: Sent to judge and destroy Sodom and Gomorrah.
Jesus (Messiah): The future Messiah from the bloodline of David, who will ultimately defeat Satan and his cohorts, saving humankind and judging fallen angels.
Human Characters (Biblical and Historical):
Noah: A righteous man, spared from the flood with his family. He remains a man of the soil and a vegetarian after the flood.
Shem: Son of Noah, ancestor of Abraham. Melchizedek is identified as Shem.
Ham: Son of Noah, father of Cush and grandfather of Nimrod. He provides first-hand accounts of the pre-flood epoch to Nimrod.
Japheth: Son of Noah.
Phenech: Prince of the Japhethites, appointed after Noah's death, defeated by Nimrod.
Johkan: Prince of the Shemites, appointed after Noah's death, subservient to Nimrod after his defeat.
Cush: Son of Ham, father of Nimrod. Meat likely became a staple during his time.
Nimrod (Talut/Saul): Son of Cush, the most influential and infamous individual in the early postdiluvian epoch. He becomes a mighty warrior and the first powerful king, establishing an empire. He institutes tyranny, leads people away from God, reintroduces Nephilim religion, and orchestrates the building of the Tower of Babel. He is considered the first Masonic Grand Master and a "sinner before God." He is also linked to the legendary figure of Talut, the first king of Israel.
Terah: Abraham's father, whose name expresses kinship with the moon god Sin.
Abraham (Abram): Guided by God from Ur to the Land of the Covenant. God establishes a covenant with him and his descendants. He inherits priestly blessings from Melchizedek. He confronts Nimrod and is miraculously saved from a furnace.
Sarah (Sarai): Abraham's wife, whose original name is the Akkadian form for "Sin's wife, the goddess, Ningal."
Lot: Abraham's nephew, whose descendants (Ammonites) inherit land that was once home to Rephaites.
Isaac: Abraham's son, who disapproves of Esau marrying Canaanite wives.
Esau (Edom): Son of Isaac, born evil, sells his birthright, and is a mortal enemy of Jacob. He marries Canaanite (Nephilim) wives and forms an alliance with the Horites, creating the "Great Amalekite Nation." His dying wish is for Amalek to thwart Israel.
Adah: Canaanite wife of Esau, mother of Eliphaz.
Basemath: Daughter of Ishmael, married by Esau as a peace offering to Isaac.
Eliphaz: Son of Esau and Adah. He has five legitimate sons and consorts with a Horite concubine, Timna, who bears Amalek.
Timna: Horite concubine of Eliphaz, mother of Amalek.
Amalek: Son of Eliphaz and Timna. He becomes the patriarch of the Amalekite nation, who swear a blood covenant to eradicate Israel.
Jacob: Esau's brother, who inherits the birthright from Abraham. His descendants (Jacobites) slaughter Hivite giants.
Joseph: His body is brought back from Egypt and buried in Shechem.
Moses: Leads the Israelites out of Egypt. He asks King Sihon for safe passage and leads battles against Midianites. He is also the recipient of God's commands regarding the Amalekites.
Zipporah: Moses's wife, possibly a Nephilim or Cainite Nephilim crossbreed.
Joshua: Successor to Moses, who leads the conquest of the Promised Land, including the destruction of Jericho and the defeat of various giant-infested nations (Amorites, Anakites, Northern alliance). He does not attack the Philistines.
Rahab: A prostitute in Jericho who assists Israelite spies and is spared during the city's destruction.
Sihon (Arad): Anakite King, ruler of territory east of the Jordan. He is of enormous size, extraordinarily fleet of foot, and refuses Moses and the Israelites safe passage. He is defeated by Israel.
Og: Brother to Sihon, also a giant who survived the flood. Defeated by Israel.
Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, Reba: The five Midianite kings executed by Moses for allying with King Sihon.
King Japhia: King of Lachish, defeated by Joshua.
King Horam: King of Gezer, who marches to Lachish in support but is also defeated by Joshua.
Jabin: Northern Amorite King of Hazor, who forms a large alliance against Joshua and is defeated at the waters of Merom.
Jobab, Shimron, Acshaph: Kings who ally with Jabin against Joshua.
Hamor and Shechem: Hivite princes and founders of Shechem. They are slaughtered by Jacobites despite offering peace and circumcision.
Samuel: Prophet who anoints Saul as king and recommissions him to obliterate the Amalekites.
Saul (Labaya): First king of Israel, chosen for his military prowess and physical stature. He is commanded by God to utterly destroy the Amalekites but fails to fully obey, leading to consequences for his descendants.
Goliath: A Gittite from Gath, a Philistine warrior leader, described as a Nephilim/Gibborim potentate. He challenges Israel and is slain by David. He is believed to be one of the five Philistine potentates.
Ishi-Benob, Saph, Lahmi, Sippai: Four other prominent giants (Nephilim/Gibborim potentates) among the Philistines, likely ruling the other four Philistine city-states. Lahmi is Goliath's brother.
David: Chosen by God to succeed Saul. A warrior king who fulfills Israel's commission to exterminate the giants (Nephilim), secures an age of peace, and establishes Jerusalem as the heart of Israel. He is the ancestor of Jesus.
Jashobeam, Eleazer, Abishai, Benaiah, Elhanan, Johnathan, Sibbeccai: Key commandos among David's "mighty men," an elite fighting force that helped conquer remaining enemies and exterminate Nephilim.
Uriah: Husband of Bathsheba, murdered by David's conspiracy.
Bathsheba: Woman with whom David commits adultery.
Nathan: Prophet who rebukes David for his sins.
Michal: Saul's daughter, whom David marries after slaying 200 Philistines.
Solomon: Son of David, a king of wisdom who is permitted to build the holy temple.
King Rehoboam: Successor to King Solomon, goes to Shechem to be crowned.
King Jeroboam: Rebels against Rehoboam and Judah, refortifies Shechem as the capital of northern Israel.
Sargon the Great: (Historical figure) First to conquer Mesopotamian cities into an empire, maintaining "exalted" Nephilim lineages at his court.
Josephus: Ancient historian, noted for his accounts of Nimrod's tyranny, Esau's marriages, and Goliath.
George Smith: Assyrian and Babylonian discoveries, suggesting Nimrod was a benevolent king. (The source refutes this interpretation).
Demond Wilson: Believes Nimrod desired a one-world government with a man as its god.
Ginzberg: A scholar referenced for Jewish legends regarding Sihon's original name, Nimrod's actions, and Esau's hatred for Jacob.
Lucian: Greek satirist, referenced regarding Adonis (Baal).
Neil Asher Silberman and Israel Finkelstein: Scholars who assert the Philistine term "seranim" is linked to the Greek "tyrannos."
Gyges: The first ruler called Tyrannos in Greek literature, king of Lydia, also identified with Greek Titans.
Muhammad: Islamic prophet, quoted regarding David's sovereignty and wisdom.
Knight and Lomas: Authors referenced regarding the legitimacy of kingship through eradicating giants.
Hitler: (Historical figure) Compared to Nimrod for his practice of casting those who refused fire worship into furnaces.
Antichrist: Future figure who will lead end-time genocide and reign as a "modern Nimrod."
Nations/Peoples/Tribes (often associated with Nephilim):
Nephilim: Descendants of the "sons of God," giants who dominate governments, settle in the Land of the Covenant in rebellion against God, and ambush Israel. They exist both before and after the flood.
Amalekites: Posterity of Nephilim, living in Negev, Hittites, Jebusites, and Amorites. They swear a blood covenant to eradicate Israel. Considered giants.
Amorites: Posterity of Nephilim, living in the hill country. Strategically control essential mountain roads in Canaan. Infested with Anakites. Considered giants.
Anakites (Sons of Anak): Descendants of Nephilim, powerful people in fortified cities. Sihon is an Anakite king.
Hittites: People among whom Nephilim lived, residing in the hill country. They were defeated by Philistines and potentially learned iron smelting from them.
Perizzites: People among whom Nephilim lived, residing south and east of the hill country.
Ammonites: Destroyed the Zamzummites (Rephaites). Inherited land given to descendants of Lot.
Moabites: Dispossessed the Emites (Rephaites).
Edomites: Descendants of Esau, including Amalekites.
Philistines: Non-Semitic race, possibly descended from Aryans (Titans). Occupy Gaza, have five city-states (Pentapolis), and are a formidable military force. They have Avvites (Nephilim residue) dwelling among them, inciting conflict with Israel. They control the iron trade.
Jebusites: Posterity of Nephilim, occupying central Judah around Jerusalem. A sect of Canaanites.
Rephaites: Giant aborigines who occupied land east of the Jordan, called Emites by Moabites and Zamzummites by Ammonites. They were "masters of war."
Zuzites: Giants encountered by the Mesopotamian alliance in Ham.
Horites: People in the hill country of Seir, encountered by the Mesopotamian alliance. Esau and his posterity intermarried with them.
Emites (Emin): Giant aborigines east of the Jordan, dispossessed by Moabites, feared for their sinfulness and size.
Zamzummites: Rephaites called "noisemakers" by the Ammonites, known for loud voices and war talent, destroyed by Ammonites.
Avvites (Avim): Iniquitous giants who dwelled among the Philistines in Gaza, identified with Hivites. The Philistine rulers are called Avvites.
Auzim: Dwelled in Ham, translated as "Shining People."
Iuvim: Egyptian name for giants, describing "Snake-like qualities" and ability to judge soil.
Canaanites: Various nations descended from Canaan, many infested with Nephilim. They form city-states like ancient Greece, worshipping Baal, Astarte, and Molech. Phoenicians are also Canaanites.
Kenites: Descendants of Cain, believed to carry the Mark of Cain. Listed inexplicably as a nation in God's Covenant with Abraham, existing before Abraham and Esau.
Kenizzites: Generally believed to descend from Kenaz (Esau's descendant), but the source suggests they existed before Esau and Abraham, indicating a Nephilim connection.
Midianites: Allied with King Sihon against Israel, resulting in the execution of their five kings. Not a Nephilim nation but misguided.
Hivites: Group who tried to make peace with Joshua. Believed to be a Nephilim/Horite ethnic subdivision that interbred with Canaanites. Princes Hamor and Shechem were Hivite.
Chaldeans: Originated in Accad (northern Babylon), aggressive and warlike, proficient in astrology and astronomy. Believed to be "sons of Nimrod," practicing idolatrous fire worship.
Israelites: Descendants of Abraham, chosen by God for a specific destiny to save humankind. They are bound by a Holy Covenant and commissioned to cleanse the Land of the Covenant from defiled people. They are often punished for disobedience.
Judah: Southern kingdom of Israel, later destroyed by Babylonians.
Assyrians: Ancient empire that laid waste to Syria and overthrew "offspring of the giants" (Amorites and Amalekites). Later destroyed Israel.
Babylonians: Later destroyed Judah.
Romans: Dispersed Judah.
Deities/Cults:
Sin: Moon god worshipped in Ur.
Innana: Daughter of Sin.
Ningal: Akkadian goddess, "Sin's wife."
Baal: Favored Canaanite deity, the Great Storm God of the Sea, rewarded with kingship. Also identified as Adon/Adonai/Adonis.
Astarte/Ashtar: Canaanite goddess.
Molech: Infamous bull cult among Canaanites.
El: Mightiest Canaanite god, represented by the sun, fond of impregnating human females. Appointed gods to nations (Chemosh to Moab, Milkom to Ammon, Yahweh to Israel). Described as a bloody tyrant and part of the "celestial mafia of watchers."
Tiamet: Sea monster defeated by Baal.
Uranus: El's father, dethroned by El.
Chemosh: God of Moab.
Milkom: God of Ammon.
Poseidon: God associated with the bull cult of Minoans.
Zeus: Father of Minos (with Europa).
Other Significant Terms/Concepts:
Land of the Covenant (Promised Land): The land God reserved for Himself and bequeathed to Abraham's descendants, Israel. Infested with Nephilim after the flood.
Postdiluvian World: The world after the flood.
Deluge: The Great Flood.
Gibborim: Ancient heroes, "mighty ones," or "potentates." While Nephilim can be described as Gibborim, not all Gibborim are Nephilim. Nimrod is considered Gibborim but likely not Nephilim.
Table of Nations: Genealogical record, notably excludes Anakites, Kenites, Kenizzites, and other Nephilim.
Tower of Babel: A structure built by people under Nimrod to reach the heavens, stopped by God.
Shinar: The plain where the Tower of Babel was built.
Ur: City where Abraham originated, home to the moon cult.
Hebron/Kiriath Arba: Infamous capital for Anak, where David was first anointed king of Judah and then all Israel.
Accad: Northern Babylon, where Chaldeans originated. Also part of Nimrod's post-Babel empire.
Shechem (Tell Balath): Prosperous city where Joseph and Jacob were buried. Location where Abimelech destroyed the House of Baal-Berith. Capital of northern Israel under Jeroboam.
Pentapolis: The five city-states of Philistia (Gath, Ashod, Ashkelon, Gaza, and Ekron), governed by Seranim (tyrants/kings).
Seranim: The unusual term for the Philistine rulers, linked etymologically to Greek "tyrannos" (tyrant).
Spurious Sciences: Illicit knowledge associated with Nimrod and Hermes, described as "Masonry."
Masonry: A secret society associated with Nimrod as its first Grand Master, promoting "spurious sciences" and rebellion against God.
Antichrist: A future figure described as a "modern Nimrod," who will lead end-time genocide and embody the Amalekite hatred.
The Sign of Noah: A prophetic warning for the last days, connected to the utopian vision of Shinar.
Holy Covenant: The agreement between God and Israel, demanding specific requirements and leading to severe punishments for violations.
The King Edict: God's command for Israel to appoint a king chosen by Him.
Driving Out the Nations Edict: God's command for Israel to drive out the inhabitants of the land, specifically mentioning putting men to the sword and not showing pity.
Going to War Edict: God's directive for Israel during wartime, including putting all men of a city to the sword.
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