Moses put the most important thing he learned right up front in his Book of Genesis, where it wouldn't be missed. Moses' story of psychological discovery and spiritual experience begins in the Book of Exodus, of course, but what he discovered and learned he put up front in Genesis, for it is right that the most important things go first. In like manner, the most important thing in the Book of Genesis went first. Genesis 1:1 is Moses' conclusion and summary of all he learned from and of God: "As the Beginning, the Son of God CREATES the heavens and the earth."
Moses recognized Genesis 1:1's priority, its preeminence in thought and meaning. There is nothing else in Scripture that compares. The verse, properly read, blows everything else away. But ah! There is the rub: "properly read." Most people cannot read a word of Hebrew, except perhaps for the tetragrammaton (yod-hey-vav-hey going the other way), and certainly not the Hebrew's ancient Aramaic. Depending on Victor Alexanders' English translations of Scripture from the Ancient Aramaic, I found Genesis 1:1 to be the most succinct, the most eloquent, and the most insightful sentence ever composed. Certainly the most important to us...properly read.
How does Alexander translate it? "As the beginning, the Son of God creates the heavens and the earth" (Genesis 1:1 Alexander, 2008 edition; is "the Son of Allaha" in 2015 edition of Old Testament Scriptures). I capitalize the word Beginning, for the Son of God, properly understood, IS the Beginning! The Son of God is the Consciousness of the Ineffable Most High, and by It He creates - is creating - infinitely, moment by moment, presently and continuously - the heavens and the earth we experience.
"As the Beginning, the Son of God creates the heavens and the earth."
As Mr. Biden says, "Just think of it!" Watch and learn the many YouTube videos dissecting the first word in the Bible, variously transliterated as brasheeth (Aramaic), berisheet, and bereshith; and from Gregg Braden's videos on the Seven Essene Mirrors. Understand from Neville Goddard's teachings that we create our experiential worlds by our imagined assumptions of reality. We, our imaginations, are that Son of God.
The first thing Moses teaches in the Bible is the single most important thing in the whole Bible.
"As the Beginning, we, the Son of God, create OUR heavens and OUR earth."
Everything else is commentary.
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