V olume IV covers six important discoveries:
II. The priests were Ephraimites, not Levites, and they all knew it and wrote about it in code even up to the first destruction of the Temple.
III. The real story about Jeremiah and to whom he married his daughter off. That act eventually made Jeremiah a relative of Nabopolassar, the founder of the Babylonian Empire. The book answers the statement in II Kings 24:17, “And the king of Babylon made Mattaniah, his father's brother, king in his stead and changed his name to Zedekiah.”
IV. Baruch, the grandson of Jeremiah, is the priest who took the Ark of the Covenant out of Jerusalem and hid it back in the family burial cave at the Real Mount Sinai. The author discovered and covered that in Volume 3.
V. There were not ten commandments, but twelve. There was not one set of tablets but two. The one received on the 47th day of the second year was the Torah we have today with 304,805 letters. The second, much smaller stone tablets were the replacements that were broken by Aaron. The set he broke was the first set that was received in the first month the Hebrews arrived at Mount Sinai the year before. The story of the Assembly is told in Exodus 19:10-25.
VI. What happened to the Jewish religion over the past 200 years, and why the conflict between the Reform movement and the Conservative and Orthodox branches of the religion?
Table of Contents
Introduction, 1
The True Identity of the Priest Class, 11
The Importance of the Ark of the Covenant, 23
Joshua and the Judges Period, 51
David's Assent to Power and the Kingdom, 79
The Priests at the Time of Solomon, 85
The Pagan King Who Changed the Calendar, 91
The Prophets and the Priests to the Fall of Jerusalem, 121
The Babylonians and Where They Came From, 141
The Prophets Jeremiah and what Happened to Him. 151
Thanks to Baruch 167
The Books the Piso’s Inserted Into the Hebrew Scriptures, 177
What are the main reasons this knowledge had not been discovered before? , 205
ISBN 9780930808228 (pbk.: alk. paper), 242 pgs.,
$26.95