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I am José Galindo. This blog exists to challenge dogmas that for centuries were imposed on peoples as if they were absolute truth. Many of those ideas did not spread through the strength of reason, but through the weight of power, tradition, and, in other times, even by the sword. Here I analyze texts and doctrines to question what few dare to examine. If you seek to think for yourself and examine what others accept without asking, this channel is for you and will give you a guideline to detect even more lies than those I detected, and perhaps it will even encourage you to create your own blog to warn people who do not deserve to be deceived.

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Teachings of Cleobulus of Lindos, a Greek thinker of the 6th century BC: “Do good to your friends and to your enemies, for in this way you will preserve the former and be able to attract the latter.” “Any man, at any moment in life, can be your friend or your enemy, depending on how you behave toward him.” Teachings of Jesus Christ? Matthew 5:44 “…do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who insult you and persecute you…” Matthew 7:12 Therefore, whatever you want men to do to you, do also to them, for this is the law and the prophets. The law and the prophets command to treat each person as he deserves; the wicked does not deserve good treatment according to the law: Deuteronomy 19:18 And the judges shall inquire diligently; and if that witness is a false witness and has accused his brother falsely, 19 then you shall do to him as he thought to do to his brother; so you shall remove the evil from among you. And if we speak of prophets, according to the prophet Nahum: Nahum 1:2 “The Lord is a jealous and avenging God; the Lord is full of vengeance and wrath. He takes vengeance on his adversaries and reserves wrath for his enemies.” Did Jesus really present God as an example to abandon the principle of “an eye for an eye”? Matthew 5:45 “…so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven, who makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust.” According to Genesis 19:23–24: “The sun was rising over Sodom, over the wicked (Genesis 13:13); shortly afterward, God rained fire and brimstone upon the wicked…” Do not ask whether Jesus spoke of a different God; ask why Rome did so. They preach: “Blessed are the poor… woe to you who are rich.” But then they ask people for tithes, or sell them “sacraments,” and live like the rich. And they also say: “Give as an act of faith.” Faith in what? In God… or in the words of emperors behind the councils? And tell me something else: do you consider it wise to offer the other cheek to the enemy? If we say yes… then was “an eye for an eye” never wise? Shall we say that God is perfect, but also that He makes mistakes and denies His own laws? And meanwhile… do they not ask you for tithes while preaching “give to anyone who asks you”? The false beggar is grateful for that teaching of the false prophet. But the false prophet does not thank me for this teaching, because it exposes him. Tell me, do you really believe that the desire of the righteous is that their wicked enemies strike them on the other cheek? Matthew 13:47 Likewise, the kingdom of heaven is like a net that was cast into the sea and gathered fish of every kind; 48 and when it was full, they drew it ashore; and sitting down, they gathered the good into vessels, but threw the bad away. 49 So it will be at the end of the age: the angels will come forth and separate the wicked from among the righteous, 50 and will cast them into the furnace of fire; there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Psalms 112:10 The wicked shall see it and be grieved; he shall gnash his teeth and melt away; the desire of the wicked shall perish. No message, however wise and just it may be, pleases everyone; for some reason Rome persecuted one, did it not? However, there are those who believe that this same message ceased to displease it and ended up becoming its official religion, as if Rome had changed… If it did not change, then Rome spread the word of the slanderer, the word of Satan, because the word of God never pleased it. Remove the wings from the false angel Michael and you will see a Roman legionary, sword in hand, saying: “If you want protection, pray kneeling before my statue. Submit to our authority” (Romans 13:1), “do not resist the evil we do to you” (Matthew 5:39), and “if we take what is yours, do not demand it back” (Luke 6:30). Do you really believe that Jesus said that, and not the empire that crucified him and then bore false witness against him? Word of Zeus: “Those who worshiped me ate pork (2 Maccabees 6, 2 Maccabees 2:7); that must not change… I will send my servants to say that Jesus and his followers said that eating pork no longer defiles a man (Matthew 15:11, Luke 10:9, 1 Timothy 4:1–5), and that he looked like me, so that my servants will continue to worship my image, for mine will say that his followers asked that he be worshiped (Hebrews 1:6, 2 Thessalonians 2). He came to fulfill the law and the prophets (Matthew 5:17–18). But I came to abolish the law and the prophets, and to usurp Yahweh, his God (Deuteronomy 4:3–8, Psalms 97:1–7, Exodus 20:3–5).” Word of Satan: “Love your enemy, so that the tyrant who robs you and worships my image may sleep peacefully.”

Friday, May 15, 2026

The Prophecies of Isaiah That Challenge the Religions Created Through Deception by the Roman Empire


The Christianity, Islam, and the Uncomfortable Prophecy for Rome

THE COMMON DOGMA

(Christianity and Islam)

Christianity and Islam claim that Gabriel announced the virgin birth of Jesus to fulfill Isaiah (Matthew 1 / Quran 19).

But Isaiah 7:14–16 does not announce Jesus, nor does it speak of a “perpetual virgin.”

  • The sign was given to King Ahaz and was to be fulfilled immediately, before the child knew how to distinguish between good and evil.

  • Isaiah speaks of a young woman, not of a woman who remained a virgin after childbirth.

  • The fulfillment occurs with Hezekiah, a faithful king during the time of Ahaz:

    • He destroys the bronze serpent (2 Kings 18:4–7)

    • God was with him (Immanuel)

    • Assyrian defeat prophesied by Isaiah (2 Kings 19:35–37)

The perpetual virgin birth, shared by Christianity and Islam, does not come from Isaiah, but from a later rereading imposed by Rome.

These contradictions do not come from God. A tyrannical empire did not want peoples who demanded respect for their dignity, but peoples on their knees.

Here is the detail of how, according to the biblical texts, Isaiah's prophecy about the virgin was fulfilled with King Hezekiah.


Around 1440 BC, Jehovah commanded Moses to make a bronze serpent and set it on a pole so that anyone who looked at it would be healed; He never commanded that it be honored, prayed to, or used as an object of prayer or worship.

Context — Numbers 21:4–9

The Israelites complained against God and Moses in the wilderness, and Jehovah sent fiery serpents that bit and killed many. God instructed Moses to make a bronze serpent and put it on a pole. Anyone who was bitten, if they looked at the bronze serpent, would live.

About seven centuries later, around 715 BC, King Hezekiah destroyed the bronze serpent because the people of Israel had begun to worship it, burning incense to it. This was a clear transgression of God's law and its original purpose as a symbol of healing (Numbers 21:4–9), which is why Hezekiah removed it during his religious reforms, as related in 2 Kings 18:4.


The Assyrian army slept confidently.

The Rabshakeh had challenged Hezekiah, saying:

'In what do you trust? No god has delivered any people from my hand' (2 Kings 18:19–35).

Hezekiah went up to the temple and prayed to Jehovah, asking that His name be defended before the nations (2 Kings 19:14–19).

That night, Jehovah sent a single angel, who killed 185,000 Assyrian soldiers (2 Kings 19:35; Isaiah 37:36).

Sennacherib fled to Nineveh, humiliated and without an army (2 Kings 19:36).

This deliverance was not accidental. Isaiah had given an immediate sign to Ahaz: a young woman of his time would conceive, and before the child grew up, Judah would be delivered from its enemies (Isaiah 7:10–16).

Hezekiah, the son of Ahaz, sees that fulfillment (2 Kings 18–19).



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