The greatest sin of all mankind, I think, is choosing to be a loser and a meek participant in the world around you. This was a topic of conversation during dinner recently. It was a Christmas gathering of brilliant and religious people. Of course, the topic of Trump came up and why God had picked him out of all people to save the world. Because what is happening is nothing short of revolutionary, and there is a science to it. If you read the Bible carefully and free yourself of the many human interpretations of it that necessitate worldly politics in convincing people to be sheep and to flock to the shepherds of government for the global control of mass social movements, you’ll see that there is more to our usual thoughts on the matter. I argue often, and I did at that dinner for a lengthy diatribe about biblical understanding that my take on God is that he wants and despises meek losers who grovel at a sacrificial monument and strive to cover their nakedness. Of course, that point of view gets a lot of looks and even provokes anger. Sometimes, a lot of anger. But that wouldn’t make any of it any less accurate, and I explained why God picked Trump to save the world. And it had nothing to do with being a good boy who followed the Ten Commandments, went to church every Sunday, and obeyed all the church rules of worship to earthly terrestrial figures. No, it is because Donald Trump, the current President, and who has been for many years now psychologically dared to be something that few in the history of the world have had the guts to be, and that is to rise to the greatness of Heaven that God always intended for the humans he created. And because Trump dared to rise above the station of humanity and its meekness, he has been rewarded in many ways and put in place to do all the great things we are now seeing.

When God asked for Adam in the Garden, he couldn’t find him because his first man hid in the woods to cover his nakedness. God asked him why. “How do you know you’re naked, Adam? Who told you thus?” After some coaxing, Adam blamed it on Eve, his woman, and revealed that the lowly serpent had tricked them into eating from the knowledge of good and evil. And that they were no longer qualified to reside in the Heavenly garden, and the cherubim cast them out and prevented them from returning. The same cherubim atop the Ark of the Covenant kept ordinary people from gazing into it to read the Ten Commandments for themselves. The use of fear to keep ordinary people from seeing reality is a common theme in the Bible, and it’s not for God as if the rules were intended to be followed, but that they were designed to provoke in humanity a lofty disposition toward the preservation of Heaven on Earth as God created it. These problems would arise again throughout the Bible but would most culminate in what I consider to be the two biggest sins noted in the Bible: the failures of King David and his son, King Solomon. Even after all that God did to forgive them and prop them up with riches and power on earth, they both fell short because of their insecurity with women and did not live up to the lofty goals God intended for them. Israel would never rise again to its former glory because God punished his chosen people for their meekness, the greatest sin that there is.

In King David’s condition, it was when he plotted to kill the husband of a woman he was watching bath, and he wanted her for herself, Bathsheba. David had many wives and could have had any woman he wanted. But he wanted this one who was married to a military man whom David had control over. So David plotted his death to marry the woman, and all kinds of problems arose because of this scheme. God wasn’t happy and decided that David wasn’t qualified to build a temple on earth to represent Heaven’s presence, so he left it to David’s son, Solomon. King Solomon had wisdom, women, and wealth; God put it all at his feet. But Solomon found maintaining all his wives difficult, and he built temples for their crazy gods, too. And it upset God, Yahweh, so much so that God told Solomon that his kingdom would end with his death and be split in two by his sons. And that Israel would never recover, which it never has. But the sin was not so much in following God’s instructions, just as Moses had to be pushed into doing his great deed of freeing the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt only to stagger in front of the giants of Canaan because they doubted that God would give them a victory over such a terrible foe. So they were punished with 40 years in the wilderness for doubting in themselves that God would grant them protection. For that doubt, they were punished. So, we see the trend in the Bible that God expects his chosen people to rise above and push forward and not fail to meekness.

When Jesus said upon the cross, “My god, my God, why have you forsaken me,” many interpret that as the fulfillment of an ancient prophecy. But it’s just another abandonment of God of those he put his hand on who fell short in life and did not rise to the occasion and stand against the tide of evil. It was the meek who interpreted the act as a sacrifice to wash away the sins of humanity, when in truth, God was always God, and he wanted to defeat his foes in the world who were trying to destroy his concepts of Heaven on Earth and that humans would be his direct representatives in this dimensional reality. And yes, of course, I get a lot of nasty looks when I say this, and I certainly did at that dinner. That kind of talk rocks the foundation of everything people want to believe about their relationship with God. But with Trump, he didn’t back down and surrender his ego to meekness. And no matter how much the world persecuted him, he kept fighting and never surrendered himself to the naked truth of existence. Trump didn’t hide behind a tree. It might have taken him three wives to figure it out, but he learned not to look out the window and plot the death of other women’s husbands. There are better things to do. And he didn’t let a woman distract him from the pursuit of building Heaven on Earth. Through his companies, Trump has tried to develop his idea of Heaven in all his buildings and golf courses with an elevated sense of human accomplishment. And when an assassin’s bullet missed as it did in July of 2024, God spared Trump by the literal grace of God. When Trump was put before his version of Pontius Pilate, he didn’t say, “You have said so, that I am the son of God, the Messiah.” Instead, Trump said, “Yeah, so what of it? I’m your president, and I’m coming for you next.” And finally, God had someone who wouldn’t hide his nakedness in the Garden. And wouldn’t blame women for his shortcomings. And he endeavored to elevate himself above the standard, meek and weak, and to lead others to their lofty exploits. And to the way I look at things, God was finally happy with someone who dared to trust that God had his back and would behave with divine understanding. And would not hesitate to attack the Land of Canaan, filled with ancient giants that far outnumbered them. Trump gets it, and God is happy about it. And that happiness we are all feeling after this 2024 election. That’s what I said anyway, and all my dinner guests got up and left and refused to speak to me for the heresy. But deep down inside, they all know I’m right. So I paid the check and went back to my books. Truth isn’t what we want it to be; it is what it is. In this case, it requires audaciousness, which God wants, to be seen. Based on a straightforward reading of the biblical text, the greatest sin in the world is in striving to be a loser when God tried to inspire humans to greatness, to be representatives of Heaven on Earth. And it takes a lot of courage to do so.
Rich Hoffman

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