Yshá`Yâhuw (Isaiah) 18

History of blacks (Kuwsh)

  1. Hówy to the land circulating with boats that course along the rivers of Kuwsh ("black"), 2. which dispatches ambassadors [slaves] by sea and in vessels of reeds over the face of the waters. Go, swift envoys, to a heathen mass of ones dragged out and polished, to a people feared from then onwards, an unhopeful and downtrodden (116) heathen mass, which the rivers separated off his land (117). 3. All of the inhabitants of the world, and the settlers of the Land, when the signal of the mountains is raised you shall see it, and when the horn (showphâ ́r) sounds a blast you shall hear it, [Epiphany after 6th Seal] 4. Because thus says Yâ-hwéh to me: "I shall lie still and I will watch from My established place like a glowing heat (118) above the light, like a cloud of night-mist during the heat of the harvest. 5. Because before the harvest [17:10-11] (when the bud is finished and the grape is ripening) its blossom shall come to exist, but he will cut off the shoots with the pruning knives, and he will cut down and he will remove the spreading vine. [Islam takes over Kuwsh after early Christianity] 6. They shall be forsaken to both the predatory birds of the mountains and to the beasts of the land, and the predatory birds will spend the summer on him [Kuwsh enslaved for agriculture], and all the beasts of the land will spend winter on him [Kuwsh lives off of host countries’ stores]." 7. At that time [Epiphany (verse 3)] a gift shall be led to Yâ-hwéh the Upholder of all, a people who were dragged out and polished, even from a people who are held in awe from then onwards, a hopeful and downtrodden heathen mass that the rivers separated off his land, to the place of the name of Yâ-hwéh the Upholder of all: Mount Tsiyyówn! [Kuwsh converts after 6th seal]

(116) The LXX term sheds more light on this term: Lexicon entries on Strong's Greek 2662 say "metaphorically to treat with rudeness and insult, to spurn, treat with insulting neglect, to reject with disdain." This chapter well describes the history of the black people, past, present and future.
(117) It was by the rivers that slave merchants took them prisoner, and separated off this people who became believers.
(118) The word used here relates to the name of the ancestor of these people, Châm.

#Yahweh #Yahuwshua #Savior #love #mercy #obedience #happiness #grace #joy

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