Written by J.L. | Arete Gune Scroll
Foreword from the Writer
I wasn’t raised knowing the difference between Torah and Tanakh, or why the Talmud blinds so many eyes.
I didn’t know what Jehovah’s Witnesses or Mormons truly believed.
I couldn’t explain why Muslims quoted Moses but rejected Jesus.
Like many believers, I was saved by faith—but unarmed.
I drank milk for a long time—grateful to belong, but unable to stand when falsehood challenged truth.
“You need milk, not solid food… But solid food is for the mature, for those who have their powers of discernment trained…”
—Hebrews 5:12,14
Now I understand: the Word of God is not just comfort—it’s armor.
“Put on the full armor of God, so that you may be able to stand against the schemes of the devil.”
—Ephesians 6:11
We don’t wrestle with people—we wrestle with systems that disguise themselves in light, but deny the true Christ.
And we don’t go out in zeal alone—we go out equipped.
This scroll is not for arguing. It’s for arming.
Not to fight people—but to stand, unshaken, when the scroll of truth is questioned.
The Replaced Messiah: How the Talmud, Quran, Watchtower (JW), Book of Mormon, and Eastern Philosophy All Deny Him
Written by J.L. | Arete Gune Scroll
It began with a word:
“Prophet.”
Not a vision. Not a dream. Just a devotional reading in John 6—where the people, after witnessing Jesus feed the five thousand, exclaimed:
“This is indeed the Prophet who is to come into the world!”
—John 6:14
They were referring to something ancient—something Moses said in the Torah:
“The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your brothers—it is to him you shall listen.”
—Deuteronomy 18:15
This verse has echoed across generations. But its meaning has been twisted by Jews, Muslims, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons, Buddhists, and other systems—each redefining who this Prophet is and what He came to do.
Today, it’s time to unroll the scroll and expose what has been hidden.
The Prophet Moses Spoke Of—And the Truth They Missed
Moses foresaw a prophet “like me”—from among Israel.
But this was only the beginning.
Jesus didn’t just perform signs like Moses—He fulfilled what Moses only foreshadowed:
- Moses prayed, and God sent manna.
Jesus is the Bread of Life. - Moses stood between the people and God.
Jesus is the only Mediator. - Moses wrote the Law.
Jesus fulfilled it—and brought grace and truth.
But the people in John 6 only saw a glimpse.
They wanted a political king, a miracle-worker.
They didn’t realize the Prophet was also the Lamb—God in the flesh.
Talmudic Judaism: Blinding the Eyes with Tradition
The Old Testament (Tanakh) proclaims the Messiah with stunning clarity:
- Isaiah 9:6 – “His name shall be called… Mighty God.”
- Micah 5:2 – Born in Bethlehem, whose origins are “from of old.”
- Zechariah 12:10 – “They will look on Me whom they have pierced.”
- Isaiah 53 – Describes a suffering servant who bears our sins.
But modern Judaism rejects Jesus as Messiah. Why?
Because after His resurrection, the religious leaders who rejected Him codified the Talmud—a sprawling body of oral traditions, legal rulings, and rabbinic commentary that reshaped how Scripture is read.
The Talmud doesn’t replace the Tanakh—but it reinterprets it.
Isaiah 53 is no longer about the Messiah—but about Israel itself.
Messianic promises become allegory or delay.
Jesus said it plainly:
“You make void the word of God by your tradition…”
—Mark 7:13
The veil remains not because the Word is unclear—but because it’s being read through the lens of man-made tradition.
What’s the Difference Between Torah and Tanakh?
For clarity: the Torah is not the whole Old Testament.
The Torah refers to the first five books of Moses—Genesis through Deuteronomy. It contains God’s law, the creation account, and the foundation of Israel’s covenant with Him.
The Tanakh, on the other hand, is the full Hebrew Bible—what Christians call the Old Testament.
It is made up of three sections:
- Torah (Law)
- Nevi’im (Prophets)
- Ketuvim (Writings, like Psalms, Proverbs, etc.)
Tanakh = T-N-K (an acronym from the Hebrew)
Most Jews revere all three, but the Torah is given the highest authority, often read weekly in synagogue and used as the base of all rabbinic law.
So when Christians read Isaiah or Zechariah and ask, “Why can’t Jewish people see the Messiah?”—this is part of the answer:
Because they view even the Prophets through the lens of the Torah—
and the Torah itself is often interpreted through Talmudic tradition.
And This Is Why So Many Christians Freeze
It’s not because we lack faith.
It’s because we were never taught how the scrolls are structured—or how they’ve been filtered, renamed, or replaced.
That’s why so many believers—sincere, faithful, Spirit-filled—still feel afraid to witness to:
- A Muslim, quoting Deuteronomy but meaning Muhammad.
- A Jew, referencing the Torah but rejecting Isaiah.
- A Jehovah’s Witness, holding a Bible but reading a different Jesus.
- A Mormon, using familiar terms with foreign meaning.
They all claim Scripture—but it’s not the same scroll.
And unless we know what’s been changed, redefined, or hidden, we fumble at the exact moment truth needs to stand.
But once the scroll is opened—and the distortion is exposed—fear has no ground left to stand on.
Islam: Redefining the Prophet and Denying the Son
Muslim apologists frequently use Deuteronomy 18:15 to claim that Moses was prophesying Muhammad, not Jesus.
But this is false teaching, easily disproved:
“The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your brothers…”
—Deuteronomy 18:15
- “From among you” means Israel, not Ishmael.
- Jesus, not Muhammad, came from Israel and fulfilled the Law and Prophets.
Islam calls Jesus “Isa,” a prophet—not the Son of God.
- Denies the Trinity
- Denies Jesus’s crucifixion and resurrection
- Claims the Bible is corrupted and replaced by the Quran
But Jesus does not need correction.
He is the Word made flesh—not a prophet to be replaced.
Jehovah’s Witnesses: Rewriting the Word, Replacing the Son
Jehovah’s Witnesses claim Jesus is not God but Michael the archangel, a created being.
They deny the Trinity.
They teach Jesus was the first of God’s creations.
They read from a Bible translation (New World Translation) specifically edited to strip Jesus of divine titles.
But the Bible declares:
“In the beginning was the Word… and the Word was God.”
—John 1:1
“Let all God’s angels worship Him.”
—Hebrews 1:6
Mormons (LDS): A Created Jesus and a Man-Made God
Mormonism teaches:
- God the Father was once a man who became a god
- Jesus and Lucifer are spirit brothers
- Humans can become gods through “eternal progression”
This is not Christianity.
It’s Buddhism with a Bible, claiming man can evolve into godhood.
But God says:
“Before Me no god was formed, nor shall there be any after Me.”
—Isaiah 43:10
The Deeper Lie: God Comes From Man
At the heart of all these systems is the same blasphemous inversion:
That God comes from man.
Not that man was made by God, but that God evolved from man, and man can evolve back into god.
This is the lie of:
- Buddhism (self-enlightenment)
- Gnosticism (hidden knowledge)
- Transhumanism (man becomes immortal through tech)
- New Age (the “god within you”)
- Mormonism (eternal progression)
But God answers:
“You thought I was altogether like you. But I will rebuke you.”
—Psalm 50:21
This is not revelation.
It’s rebellion dressed in robes.
The Pattern Is Clear
Across Talmudic Judaism, Islam, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormonism, Buddhism, and modern progressivism, the pattern is the same:
Change who Jesus is.
Deny the Creator. Deify the creature.
It is the serpent’s lie, retold in new languages.
And now the scroll has answered it.
The Scroll Has Been Opened
The answer is not more debate.
Not rage.
Not clever words.
But Scripture—unfiltered, unedited, unveiled.
Let Isaiah speak.
Let Moses point forward.
Let Zechariah shout from the dust:
“They will look on Me whom they have pierced.”
—Zechariah 12:10
Jesus is not just a prophet.
He is not the brother of Lucifer.
He is not a being who became divine.
He is not the product of man.
He is the Word made flesh.
He is the image of the invisible God.
He is the first and the last, the One who was, and is, and is to come.
And the scroll is His.

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