May 19, 2015 SnyderTalk: 5 Battles That Changed the Middle East Forever

1--Intro Covering Israel and ME

“Sow with a view to righteousness, reap in accordance with kindness; break up your fallow ground, for it is time to seek Yahweh until He comes to rain righteousness on you.” Hosea 10: 12

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2--SnyderTalk Lead Headline for use

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Akhilesh Pillalamarri—5 Battles That Changed the Middle East Forever:

The Middle East is the cradle of civilization—and the cradle of organized warfare between states and tribes. The oldest recorded battles in history, as well as some of the most impactful, are all from this region. While not a comprehensive list by any means, here are five of the greatest battles fought in the Middle East.

Kadesh

The Battle of Kadesh was fought between the Egyptians and Hittites (from modern Turkey) in 1274 B.C.E. at a site in modern Syria near the Lebanese border. Both powers had been fighting to dominate the Levant for a while. This battle is of particular importance to the history of warfare and diplomacy because it is the earliest recorded battle for which details and tactics are known. Additionally, the subsequent peace treaty is the oldest known surviving peace treaty to date. Not only that, but both the Egyptian and Hittite copies have been found.

Putting aside the obvious importance of the battle for historians, Kadesh was quite significant. It was the largest chariot battle in history, with about 6,000 chariots involved. Subsequently, chariots became a lot less common because of improvements in horse breeding and equipment that made cavalry more useful. Constant warfare between the two states was a factor in the collapse of many of the Bronze Age civilizations shortly after when the Sea Peoples destroyed the Hittite. The actual battle itself began when the Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses II moved swiftly north to capture the city of Kadesh only to have his forces separated in their haste and to find a Hittite force near him. Though the Egyptians almost lost, they gained momentum due to tactics, bravery, and from taking advantage of the Hittites stopping to loot the Egyptian camp. Historians believe the battle was a draw and both powers claimed victory.

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SnyderTalk Comment: These facts should cause those who are brazen enough to think that they can alter the course of human destiny to think twice.

Many have tried.  All have failed.

That’s not fatalistic.  It’s realistic.

See “Exclusive: Obama to back Palestinian state at Security Council – payback for Israel’s right-wing cabinet”.

Watch out.  Obama is angry with Netanyahu and the Israeli people, but he’s spitefully poking Yahweh in the eye.

That’s a bad idea.

As children, we learned a simple song that tells the tale:

“He’s got the whole world in His hands.  He’s got the whole wide world in His hands. He’s got the whole world in His Hands.  He’s got the whole world in His hands.”

That’s the truth.  Nothing can change it.

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13--Perspectives 2

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Agence France-PresseMohamed Morsi Verdict Alarms US, Experts See ‘War’ on Brotherhood—The United States voiced alarm Sunday at death sentences handed to Egypt’s ousted president Mohamed Morsi and dozens of others, a verdict experts called a declaration of “total war” on his Muslim Brotherhood. Morsi was among more than 100 defendants ordered by an Egyptian court on Saturday to face the death penalty for their role in a mass jailbreak during the 2011 uprising. He ruled for only a year before mass protests spurred then-army chief and now President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to overthrow him in July 2013. Sisi won a presidential election in May 2014 backed by Egyptians tired of political turmoil in the world’s most populous Arab nation following the 2011 revolt against longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. Washington expressed concern over Saturday’s verdict.

SnyderTalk Comment: Someone needs to declare war on the Muslim Brotherhood.  They have declared war on everybody else including Muslims who don’t adhere to their version of Islam.  U.S. policymakers are out of their minds, including the top executive.

Mustafa Pazarlı: Adviser to Iran’s Khamenei arrives in Beirut—A senior advisor to Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei arrived Monday in Beirut for an official visit to Lebanon. Ali Akbar Velayati, a former Iranian government minister, was received by Hezbollah lawmaker Ali al-Muqdad, Iranian ambassador in Beirut Mohammad Fateh Ali, and Khalil Hamdan, a member of the Shia Amal Movement. The Iranian official is due to meet with Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam and other senior officials whose names have yet to be unveiled, diplomatic sources told Anadolu Agency. Speaking to reporters, Velayati said the “solution to Lebanon’s political problems is up to the Lebanese themselves.” He added: “We are confident that, given Lebanon’s longstanding democracy, the Lebanese will find the right… solutions to the ongoing presidential vacuum.”

SnyderTalk Comment: I’ll bet that something is brewing between Hezbollah and Iran and that it involves Israel.

Hezbollah is a political party.  The name means “Party of Allah”.

Steve LeBlanc and Bob Salsberg: Will Death Make Tsarnaev a Martyr? Experts Say It Depends—Does putting Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to death make him a martyr for the cause? Some analysts worry that Tsarnaev’s eventual execution could inspire more attacks. But others, including Islamic leaders, say no: Tsarnaev was more of a lone wolf with a low profile among radical jihadists and no known links to the Islamic State group, al-Qaida or other influential terror organizations. It will take years, possibly decades, of appeals before Tsarnaev — sentenced Friday by a federal jury in Boston to death by lethal injection — is executed. The martyrdom question surfaced during his trial for his role in the 2013 attack that killed three spectators and wounded more than 260 others near the marathon finish line. Tsarnaev’s defense had argued for life imprisonment as a better option because it offered “no martyrdom”; prosecutors insisted he had a chance to die as a martyr during a firefight with police trying to capture him but instead hid in a boat.

Ben Brody: How Bill Clinton’s political legacy is causing problems for Hillary—With Bill Clinton’s approval rating surpassing both his wife’s and the current president’s, he would seem like an ideal surrogate for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. He also, however, comes with political baggage in the form of a concrete political record from his eight years in the White House. He governed as a moderate, after all, supporting or enacting policies that liberal Democrats often now deride. That creates difficulties for Hillary Clinton, as she seeks support from the well organized and vocal left wing of the party. In fact, on key issues from free trade to bank regulation, some Bill Clinton’s biggest achievement could come back to haunt her.

Al Arabiya NewsTurkey, Hamas, rights group condemn Mursi death sentence—Turkey, the rights group Amnesty International, and Hamas have all criticized Egypt on Saturday for sentencing former President Mohammed Mursi to death. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that Egypt was returning to “old Egypt.” Erdogan also criticized western nations for not speaking out against Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah Al Sisi, who ousted Mursi, and for not condemning the death sentences being handed down to the former Islamist president’s Muslim Brotherhood group. “While the West is abolishing the death penalty, they are just watching the continuation of death sentences in Egypt. They don’t do anything about it,” the Turkish president was quoted by state-run Anatolian news agency as saying.

Herb Keinon: Analysis: A softer Obama tone on Israel?—In a telling indication of her priorities, the last question Al-Arabiya reporter Nadia Bilbassy-Charters asked US President Barack Obama in an interview over the weekend had to do with Israel and the Palestinians. “You’re the second president I’m interviewing who is leaving office without realizing the vision of a Palestinian state,” she said. “You had serious efforts in the first and second administration. Yet we receive – we reached a dead-end. Why? Who is responsible for that?” Obama’s answer was telling both for what he said, as for what he didn’t. Here he was, talking to a Saudi- owned pan-Arab network, and he could have won points by bashing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, by placing the blame for the stalemate – as some officials in his administration have done – on the settlements.

SnyderTalk Comment: A “softer” tone from Obama?  Hardly.

It depends on his audience and his immediate objective.  President Obama speaks with a forked tongue.

I love that phrase.  It’s so much more polite and diplomatic than saying that Obama is a bald-faced liar.

See “Obama blasts Israel, touts lifting Iran sanctions in Saudi paper” and “Obama rules out Israeli-Palestinian peace deal with Netanyahu”.

If that’s Obama’s soft approach, it’s easy to understand why people all over the world have had enough of the Kenyan from Hawaii.

Marilyn Malara: New map shows most distinct causes of death by state— The CDC has published a color-coded map outlining the most “distinctive” causes of death for each of the 50 U.S. states. While the most common killers nationally are heart disease and cancer, the map shows what study authors call a “more nuanced view of mortality variation” within the United States. The research team started with 113 causes of death and then used a ratio to divide the mortality rates in each state by those of the whole country.

AFP: Swarms of Mini-Drones Prepping for Remote Battle—US military scientists have invented a miniature drone that fits in the palm of a hand, ready to be dropped from the sky like a mobile phone with wings. The “micro air vehicle” is named after the insect that inspired its invention, the Cicada, which spends years underground before appearing in great swarms, reproducing and then dropping to the ground dead.

Abraham Miller: The Vatican Will Not Protect Christians By Recognizing ‘Palestine’—When it comes to Israel, the Vatican sometimes cannot seem to get it right. And the announcement on Wednesday that it had concluded a treaty to recognize Palestinian statehood is yet another indication that the Vatican might want to follow Jesus’ admonition to give unto God what is his, and leave unto Caesar the affairs of men. Although the recognition is largely going to be symbolic, it serves as a powerful reward for Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president whose term expired six-years ago, to continue to sabotage any meaningful peace talks with Israel and to showcase terrorists as role models to entice future generations of young Palestinians to blow themselves up amid crowds of innocents. The action will not cause the creation of a Palestinian state, but it will send a strong message to Israel that it is being isolated diplomatically.

SnyderTalk Comment: You can’t make deals with the devil.  He lies.  He’s the “father of lies”.

Stephen Flatow: Kids Who Try to Kill With Rocks, and the Media That Ignores Them—My eye was drawn this week to one of those little news items that appear in the Israeli media, but never make it into the American press. I call them the near-misses: the bomb that was discovered just before it went off, the bullet that struck just inches from its intended target. No casualties? That apparently dictates that the news is not fit to print. This time it was a shower of rocks that were hurled at an Israeli automobile on the afternoon of May 8. Chen Borochov made the mistake of driving through an Arab neighborhood of Jerusalem known as A-Tur. He wasn’t provoking anybody. He was just driving home. His crime was that the color of his license plate identified him as an Israeli. And that was enough for Borochov’s assailants to launch a violent ambush. One of the huge rocks smashed through the right side of his car’s front windshield. “If someone had been [sitting] next to me, he would have certainly died or remained a vegetable for the rest of his lifetime,” Borochov later remarked.

Soeren Kern: Muslim Rape Gangs, Terrorists as ‘Pop-Idols,’ and the Trafficking of Children— What follows is a summary of some of Islam and Islam-related issues in Britain during April 2015, categorized into four broad themes: 1) Islamic extremism; 2) British multiculturalism; 3) Muslim integration; and 4) Muslims and the British general elections. 1. Islamic Extremism and Syria-Related Threats British police believe that about 600 Britons have travelled to Syria and Iraq since the conflict began in early 2011. About half of those are believed to have returned to the UK. On April 1, police in Turkey detained nine British nationals from Rochdale, Greater Manchester, who were allegedly seeking to join the Islamic State in Syria. The nine — five adults and four children, including a one-year-old baby — were arrested in the Turkish city of Hatay.

Yoram Schweitzer: Hamas and the Islamic State Organization: Toward a Head-On Collision in the Gaza Strip?— Recent weeks have seen an escalation in the conflict in the Gaza Strip between Hamas and the Salafi jihad groups that support the Islamic State organization. Israel clearly has much interest in the conflict, especially given the possibility that an Islamic State infrastructure or a satellite of the group backed by al-Baghdadi could be established in Gaza. Any development in this direction is liable to translate into activity against Israel. It is possible that in the framework of the effort to halt the expansion of the Islamic State’s influence in the Gaza Strip and Sinai, there might be indirect and undeclared cooperation between Hamas and Egypt, and between Hamas and Israel. If Hamas indeed proves its readiness for both a long term lull with Israel and assistance in the regional campaign to halt the expansion of the Islamic State, it is likely to accumulate points that will slightly offset its negative image, which deteriorated throughout the Middle East following last summer’s conflict with Israel.

DEBKAfile: Some 250 Hizballah dead in Qalamoun battle. Nasrallah pushes Lebanese army to enter Syrian war— Amid Hizballah’s rising war losses, its leader Hassan Nasrallah strongly urged the Lebanese chief of staff Gen. Jean Kahwagi to send his troops into battle over the strategic Qalamoun Mountain, alongside Hizballah and the Syrian army, DEBKAfile’s military sources disclose. Nasrallah argued that the time had come for the Lebanese army to take a hand in the fighting, since the Syrian rebels led by Al Qaeda’s Syrian arm, the Nusra Front, were shelling the eastern Beqaa Valley of Lebanon from their Syrian strongholds on the mountain that sits athwart the Syrian-Lebanese border.  Thousands of jihadis, he said, were seizing land around the northeastern Lebanese villages of Arsal and Nahleh. Another of Nasrallah’s demands was for Gen. Kahwagi to bring out the Lebanese army’s heavy artillery to shell rebel Qalamoun concentrations, positions and moving vehicles, because they endangered Lebanese national security. The Lebanese general gave the Hizballsah chief a flat no. He declared the Lebanese army would not “slip” into any war inside the Syrian area of Qalamoun where Hizballah and the Syrian army are currently fighting jihadis, but added: “The army is ready to confront any assault on Lebanese sovereignty and push back any infiltration by militants.”

Zalman Shoval: Beware the pan-Arab army— One of the direct results of the changes in the United States’ policies in the Middle East, especially the change in its relationship with Iran, is a growing concern among the U.S.’s Arab allies that they can no longer trust it when it comes to their defense and security. This, compounded by the chaos sparked in the Middle East by the rise of the Islamic State group and Syria’s uncertain future, is the driving force behind the Arab League’s rather urgent decision to form a special military force. Two weeks ago, the top military commanders of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait and the Persian Gulf emirates met in Cairo and decided to form a joint military command. The heads of these various Arab states will have to decide on the next step in this venture by the end of June, and it is safe to say that not everyone in Washington is thrilled by the prospect of this strategic Arab initiative, if only due to the fact that it clearly demonstrates the Arab world’s reservations over Washington’s policies on Iran and the impending nuclear deal.

David Gibson: Syrian Archbishop: ‘We expect Christians in the West to help us. They do not’— Archbishop Jean-Clement Jeanbart of Aleppo is returning to the front line of the real war on Christians, which he calls home — that is, Aleppo in war-torn Syria, where his ancient church faces the threat of extinction. I wrote here about Jeanbart, who was in the U.S. last week in an effort to raise awareness about the plight of Christians in Syria — they include his Eastern-rite Melkite Catholics as well or Eastern Orthodox and other churches — and to raise money for their survival. The archbishop is a remarkable figure, facing the personal danger while trying to protect an entire community and tradition and way of life. He had controversial things to say (at least in the U.S. political context) about supporting Syrian president Assad; when faced with ISIS as the alternative, you understand his “devil-you-know” choice.

Rachel Avraham: Jerusalem Day riots at the Nablus Gate [Damascus Gate]—It is a tense Jerusalem Day in the Israeli capital city.  Dozens of people clashed this evening with Israeli security officials near Nablus Gate in the Old City of the Israeli capital city of Jerusalem.   Two Palestinian rioters were arrested.  The Police are preparing for the arrival of reinforcements to come to the area of the Jerusalem Day celebrations near the Western Wall due to the increased fear of disturbances. In the afternoon, several dozen Arabs from East Jerusalem arrived to the area of Nablus Gate and started clashes with Jews. The demonstrators waved Palestinian flags. They threw stones and glass bottles at security forces. One of the policemen was wounded from a stone that hit his head.

Zack Pyzer: Is anti-Semitism the dominant factor behind aliyah?— The Jewish Agency for Israel says in a new report that immigration to Israel (aliyah) from Western Europe in the first quarter of 2015 was unchanged from the same period last year. The statistics reveal, however, a large increase in the number of immigrants (olim) arriving from Eastern Europe, where an unstable economic and security situation prompted more emigration. Ukrainian aliyah alone rose by a whopping 215% compared to the same period last year. Prof. Robert Wistrich, head of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University, has sought to refute claims which seek to downplay the link between increasing anti-Semitism in Europe and emigration to Israel.

Ercan Gurses: Middle East turmoil if Egypt’s Mursi executed: Turkish presidency—Turkey’s presidential spokesman said on Monday the Middle East would be thrown into turmoil if Egypt carried out its death sentences on former president Mohamed Mursi and other senior Islamists. An Egyptian court on Sunday sought the death penalty for Mursi and 106 supporters of his Muslim Brotherhood, in connection with a mass jail-break in 2011. A final ruling is expected on June 2. Ibrahim Kalin told a news conference in Ankara the sentences were a “breach of justice” and called on the international community to speak out more strongly against them.

SnyderTalk Comment: There he goes again.

Erdogan is a troublemaker who wants to the sultan.

Morsi is guilty of capital crimes.  His guilt or innocence is meaningless to Erdogan.  The only thing that matters to him is that Morsi is a Muslim Brother, a radical Islamist.

Morsi was involved in the Benghazi, Libya tragedy that resulted in the death of U.S. ambassador Christopher Stevens.  For that crime alone, he should be executed.

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SnyderTalk Comment: Yahweh, they are profaning your Name and mocking You.  They are desecrating Your holy hill.  Please do something about it.

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9--Jerusalem Post

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Netanyahu: Jerusalem has and always will only be the capital of the Jewish people

American religious pluralism is an Israeli national security issue

To promote integration, IDF shuts down Druse battalion

Opposition leader Herzog: Netanyahu learning Erdogan’s ‘tricks’

At 65, hassidic woman from Bnai Brak becomes oldest in Israel to give birth

IDF official: If our war crimes probes no good, all of the West’s are no good

German neonatalogist receives PhD denied by Nazis at age 102

Assad, under pressure, may need his friends more than ever

Turkish top cleric in Gaza: Israel must be prosecuted for rights violations

Clashes erupt amid ‘Jerusalem Day’ march through Old City

Police officer injured after violent protest erupts at Jerusalem’s Damascus Gate

Police reveal major organized crime case, ‘one of the biggest ever’

Israel braces for extremely hot weather; emergency services on high alert

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10--Arutz Sheva

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Change in Temple Mount Policy? Levin Dodges Query

Vatican Defends ‘Angel of Peace’ Remark to Mahmoud Abbas

Weather or Terror? Tens of Fires Blaze Through Israel

Iran ‘Proud’ of Hezbollah Progress in Qalamoun

Lapid Issues No-Confidence Motion in New Government

BDS – A Front for ‘Genocidal Anti-Semitism’?

Maklev: It’s Hard to Live in Jerusalem

Weinstein to Lau: I Hope You’re Not Mad at Me

Shaked: Democracy Requires a Balance of Power

Ethiopian Protest Organizer Promises No Violence

Plot to Smuggle Diving Suits into Gaza Foiled

Likud: Ya’alon Has Final Authority on Construction

Labor MK Blasts PM’s ‘Fawning’ Policy on Hamas

IDF Decides: No Women in Tanks

Militias Amass for Shia-Sunni Showdown in Ramadi

EU Denounces Morsi Death Sentence

Pentagon: Situation in Ramadi Remains ‘Contested’

Turkey: 7 Soldiers Arrested in Syria-Related Case

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11--THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

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Moshe Levinger, the brazen ‘sheriff’ who brought Jews to the West Bank, dies at 80

Israel failed Ethiopian community, president says at memorial

Erdan: ‘No secret’ I wanted to stay in Interior Ministry

Khamenei tangles with US over its role in the Gulf

A death penalty for Morsi that Egypt won’t rush to carry out

US ‘deeply concerned’ by death sentence for Egypt’s Morsi

Nasrallah dismisses rumored ill-health as ‘psychological warfare’

SnyderTalk Comment: Nasrallah is obese, and he looks sick.

Somebody please give him another Twinkie.

Pope Francis canonizes first Palestinian saints

Israel’s top chef talks food and fame

Arson suspected at two East Jerusalem synagogues

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12a--Other News

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Pressure mounts on Myanmar over Asia ‘boat people’ crisis

Egypt executes Islamic State-affiliated cell members after attack on military bus

Three die as Taliban bomb targets foreign convoy near Kabul airport

Syria conflict: IS ‘withdraws’ from ancient Palmyra

Hacker ‘made plane climb’ after taking control through in-flight entertainment system

SnyderTalk Comment: That’s not encouraging.

French Jewish Woman Assaulted in Paris Suburb by 3 Men Shouting ‘Hitler Didn’t Finish His Work’

Jewish Groups Deplore Greek Demand to Remove Star of David From Holocaust Memorial

‘Freedom Flotilla III’ sets sail for Gaza

Israel’s Military Superiority at Stake as Obama Mulls Selling Advanced Weaponry to Saudi Arabia

Obama administration bans some military-style assault gear from local police

EU seeks naval mission in Mediterranean to go after smugglers

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12b--TRIC

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It’s time to give Israel the means to take out Iranian nukes

SnyderTalk Comment: That’s like saying that it’s time to let Israel do the dirty work and take the heat.  That’s the coward’s solution to the Iran problem.

Leading from behind isn’t leading at all.

Key Iraqi city [Ramadi] falls to ISIS as police, military retreat

Iran-backed Shiite militias assemble near Iraq’s Ramadi

Xi Tells Kerry China and U.S. Can Both Be Powers in the Pacific

‘Iran prepared for all scenarios in nuclear talks’ 

Kerry: Iran nuclear deal could be lesson for North Korea

Iran says Saudi Arabia should not be hosting Yemen talks

Yemen dialogue stresses Hadi’s legitimacy

Russian soldier said captured in Ukraine admits on video to spying mission

New Putin Invasion Coming This Summer

Oil prices rise on Middle East fighting; OPEC output in focus

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4--Scripture of the Day Yahweh

Exodus 10

12 Then Yahweh said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand over the land of Egypt for the locusts, that they may come up on the land of Egypt and eat every plant of the land, even all that the hail has left.” 13 So Moses stretched out his staff over the land of Egypt, and Yahweh directed an east wind on the land all that day and all that night; and when it was morning, the east wind brought the locusts. 14 The locusts came up over all the land of Egypt and settled in all the territory of Egypt; they were very numerous. There had never been so many locusts, nor would there be so many again. 15 For they covered the surface of the whole land, so that the land was darkened; and they ate every plant of the land and all the fruit of the trees that the hail had left. Thus nothing green was left on tree or plant of the field through all the land of Egypt. 16 Then Pharaoh hurriedly called for Moses and Aaron, and he said, “I have sinned against Yahweh your God and against you. 17 Now therefore, please forgive my sin only this once, and make supplication to Yahweh your God, that He would only remove this death from me.” 18 He went out from Pharaoh and made supplication to Yahweh. 19 So Yahweh shifted the wind to a very strong west wind which took up the locusts and drove them into the Red Sea; not one locust was left in all the territory of Egypt. 20 But Yahweh hardened Pharaoh’s heart, and he did not let the sons of Israel go.

SnyderTalk Comment: Read His Name is Yahweh.

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5--HNIY Print form

His Name is Yahweh explains why the Name of God, Yahweh, is so important.  It’s available in eBook format and in paperback.  It’s also available for free in PDF format.

  • God also said to Moses, “Say to the Israelites, ‘Yahweh, the God of your fathers—the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob—has sent me to you.’ This [Yahweh] is my name forever, the name by which I am to be remembered from generation to generation.” (Exodus 3: 15)
  • “Therefore behold, I am going to make them know—this time I will make them know My power and My might; and they shall know that My name is Yahweh.” (Jeremiah 16: 21)
  • “Behold, the days are coming,” declares Yahweh, “when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch; and He will reign as king and act wisely and do justice and righteousness in the land. In His days Judah will be saved, and Israel will dwell securely; and this is His name by which He will be called, ‘Yahweh our righteousness.’” (Jeremiah 23: 5-6)
  • Yeshua said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was born, I am.” (John 8: 58)

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6--His Name is Yahweh Audio Presentation 5

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The Messiah May Return Sooner than You Think

Click here to download the entire audio presentation for free and with no strings attached.  Share it as often as you want.

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14--Blessings from Revelation 2

Blessings in the Book of Revelation is a book that you need to read, especially now.  There are blessings throughout the Scriptures but Revelation is the only book in the Bible actually containing a specific blessing for reading it. It’s repeated twice, once at the beginning and again at the end. This is the reason that I believe Revelation should be the first step toward studying biblical prophecy. Though not easy to do, Revelation can be broken down and understood by anyone, not just the academic elite. So, Revelation’s blessings are for everyone.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.

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Other Books by Neil Snyder

  • Stand! is a suspense novel that exposes the lies, corruption, and greed underlying the theory that man-made CO2 emissions are responsible for global warming. Professor Wes Carlyle and Karen Sterling, his research collaborator, carefully scan the audience for their would-be attacker—a member of the enviro-gestapo who has been following them for days.  Wes spots his man in the back of the room leaning against the wall.  Suddenly, another man in the audience steps forward and moves toward Karen at a menacing pace.  With a vicious stroke, he swings a billy club at her head.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.
  • What Will You Do with the Rest of Your Life? deals with a question that every Christian has to consider: what should I do with my life? Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.
  • Falsely Accused is a true story about a young woman who was accused of committing a double homicide. It’s about a travesty of justice, and it reveals Yahweh intervening in the life of a believer to rescue her from danger in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.  Everyone will enjoy the book, but young people in particular need to read it because the mistakes made that led to the problem could have been avoided.  They were the kinds of mistakes that young people are prone to make.  As they say, forewarned is forearmed.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.

15--Concentric Circles 5

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