
Come Home
Extending the Jewish Template to all Nations
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Logline:
Come Home is a light, conversational theology seeking to understand God’s purposes for linking countless nations and clans to Judaism, Israel's “lost tribes”, and/or to Earth’s Great Script. Unlike other interfaith works, Come Home examines messianic types among a variety of nations from the perspective of the Script’s overarching plot. The book is loaded with international stories, drawing primarily from Central Asia, where the author lived for 2 decades.
Logline: Come Home is a light, conversational theology seeking to understand God’s purposes for linking countless nations and clans to Judaism, Israel's “lost tribes”, and/or to Earth’s Great Script. Unlike other interfaith works, Come Home examines messianic types among a variety of nations from the perspective of the Script’s overarching plot. The book is loaded with international stories, drawing primarily from Central Asia, where the author lived for 2 decades.
Synopsis #1: Joseph’s multicolored coat, an iconic symbol portrayed in humanity’s Script, symbolizes the multicolored nations which Joseph fed and saved during a global crisis. Those nations had been growing since God authorized Adam and Eve to faithfully multiply and cover the earth. Generations later, Joseph’s descendants didn’t do what was right and were consequently dispersed to the nations. As promised, they became seed that gave definition to already existing nations and spawned other diverse nations. How many nations, religions, and cultures were birthed from Joseph’s scattered tribes? No one knows. Scholars say Joseph’s children are gone forever. Legend, however, reveres them as the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. Current events reveal that some tribes are responding to an ancient prophecy. Jews, upholding their ancient traditions, pray three times a day for their return because their ancient text proclaims that a messianic guide will lead the tribes back to their original God and establish global peace. Throughout history, this messianic Restorer of Nations has left clues of his identity within every ethnicity. The end of the Script says he will be celebrating us when we Come Home and weave our “true colors” into his multinational mantle. Delve into these pages to discover how you and your tribe could be an essential thread in eternity's royal robe.
Synopsis #2:
Come Home is a call for each nation to return to their ancestral God, the Maker of nations. Since the time when God told Abraham that his seed wold be a blessing to all nations, every nation has their own experience with the Script's God. Some obscure tribes even consider themselves one of Israel’s ten lost tribes. The fact that so many nations and tribes see themselves with roles in Earth’s great Script is phenomenal. Fittingly, the Script’s Author portrays Himself as the caring Maker of Nations. In other words, what our generation is witnessing among the nations confirms the Script’s ancient plot.
Come Home also follows God's invisible hand at work among various faiths. Ethnic For example, ethnic Kyrgyz believe God visits homes in the form of a God-guest, a story paralleled with the Script's story of Abraham receiving God as a guest. Likewise, Islam’s Quran refers to the Script as the early revelations of Allah. Similarly, faiths, traditions, legends, proverbs, linguistics, names, and genealogies from around the world link people back to humanity’s Script.
A messianic banner among nations aligns people with the Script’s Protagonist. For instance, Kyrgyzstan's Wanderer will often ride into a village on a donkey. People who don’t recognize or greet him respectfully, lose their happiness. This Kyrgyz belief perfectly matches a scene of the Protagonist found within the Script. Likewise, nations and their national faiths are linked to the Good Book and its unforgettable Protagonist.