Recently, a friend of the CEPHER wrote and asked a few especially important questions …
We have since learned other things from history which have corroborated this account.
Given its uniquely eternal, transcendent nature, Gods people showed meticulous care in transcribing it, preserving it for generations to come. The Druids were well-respected for maintaining the peace between disparate tribes in the area where Pa’al was preaching, and they had the substantial authority to summarily exclude him (as they did Julius Caesar). While he did not have the means to war against them, he did not endorse their teaching or doctrine but continued with the “gospel” as he had preached it elsewhere. Unknown to many is the possibility that his Cepher Galatiym (epistle to the Galatians) may have been written to the Gaelic people in Northern Spain and Western France, and not at all to any “tribe” in Central Turkey, the region latter day historians have called Galatia. Jefferson himself believed that a person's religion was between them and their god. Luke written both the Gospel of Luke and Acts. 14:1-3; Rom. On this Wikipedia the language links are at the top of the page across from the article title. Pa’al was already well-acquainted with these tribes in his “lot” in Europe.There is a second witness to this effect:
The reason why the publishers of the Divine Name King James Bible restored the Divine Name seems to me a good answer to this question. It has all the appearances of being of an ancient date.Privacy Statement
For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of Yah, which is in Yahusha Ha'Mashiach our Adonai.
There are more copies of Scripture in ancient Hebrew, Greek, and other long-dead languages than any other text. The Protevangelion. [3] See the following article for some examples. John Wycliff was the first person to translate the Bible into English; he did so in the fourteenth century from the Latin Vulgate.