Exodus Effect

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New Viral Video By “Woke” Christians Causes Controversy Among the US Christian Community. The US Christian community is divided by a new video that has gone viral recently. The video that caused controversy in the Christian community was released by
a group of alleged “woke” Christians.
The clip called “The Exodus Effect” allegedly reveals a long-lost Biblical secret.
Some of those who have watched the video believe that it has forever changed
what it means to be a Christian.
The secret challenges 1,635 years of the Holy Scriptures teachings.
The video quite quickly went viral and clearly divided Christians. Some of them are
calling to remove the video from the internet while others say that it is a “Must watch.”
As of now, it is unclear how long the video will remain online.
The video can be watched here. Viewer discretion is advised.

Dr. Benet’s Dangerous Discovery

Sara Benetowa, later known as Sula Benet (23 September 1903 – 12 November 1982), was a Polish anthropologist of the 20th century who studied Polish and Judaic customs and traditions. In 1939, Dr Sula Benet found an apparent error in the bible:
A mistranslated word, according to Benet, revealed the lost recipe to God’s healing oil.

1Biography
2Cannabis research
3Works
4References
5External links
6Further reading

Biography
Born in Warsaw, then part of the Russian Empire, Benet was fascinated with Polish peasant culture from her early youth. This interest eventually led her to enroll as a student of literature and philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities in the University of Warsaw, graduating with a degree in anthropology in 1935. She then attended graduate school at Columbia University, where she received her doctorate in 1944.
Also, at this time (1936) she first made known at a seminar in Warsaw her theory that “calamus” in the Bible is hemp.[1] Benet died in New York in 1982.

Cannabis research
Based on similar words in cognate languages (Sanskrit śana, Assyrian qunnabu, Persian kenab, Arabic kanab), Benet proposed that the Biblical plants or spices “kaneh” (Ez. 27:19; Is. 43:24; Ct. 4:14), “kaneh ha-tob” (Je. 6:20), and “kaneh-bosem” (Ex. 30:23), which are usually translated as “sweet calamus” or “sweet cane“, were actually hemp. “Kaneh-bosem” was an ingredient of the holy anointing oil described in |title=Ex. 30:22-25 | source=King James Version}}
Benet argued that in many ancient languages, including Hebrew, the root “kan” had a double meaning, both hemp and reed, and that an error originated within the oldest Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, Septuagint, in the third century B.C., where the terms “kaneh” and “kaneh-bosem” had been translated as “sweet kalamos”. In the many Bible translations that followed, including Martin Luther‘s, this translation was repeated. Benet further claimed that the Scythians, who were described by Herodotus as ritual hemp users in the fifth century B.C., were at least one millennium older than has been previously assumed.[2]

Sulah Benet’s claim has found little support in the academic community among lexicographers and botanists. The standard reference lexicons of Biblical Hebrew, and reference works on Hebrew Bible plants by scholars such as University of Jerusalem botanist Michael Zohary mention Benet’s suggestion, while others argue the word refers to an either a different species of hemp or a different plant entirely. Celsius (Hierobotanicon) has suggested sweet flag (Acorus calamus), which grows in Egypt, Judaea, and Syria, containing in its stalk a soft white pith with an agreeable aromatic smell, and forming an ingredient of the richest perfumes.[3] 
Royle identified the “sweet cane” (A.V.) of Scripture (Is. 43:24; Je. 6:20) with the Andropogon calamus, a plant extensively cultivated in India, from which an oil, deemed to be the famous spikenard of antiquity, is extracted.[4] 
According to Boissier (Flora Orientalis), “kaneh” was the common marsh reed, 
Arundo donax L.[5] Some biblical scholars and botanists believe that the qaneh is probably sugarcane.[6]

Works
Konopie w wierzeniach i zwyczajach ludowych (1936)
Song, Dance, and Customs of Peasant Poland (1951)
Festive recipes and festival menus (1957)
Riddles of many lands Carl Withers, Sula Benet (1956)
Early Diffusion and Folk Uses of Hemp (1967)
Abkhasians: the long-living people of the Caucasus (1974)
How to live to be 100: the lifestyle of the people of the Caucasus (1976)

References
^ Sula Benetova 1936 Le chanvre dans les croyances et les coutumes populaires.
Comtes Rendus de Séances de la Société des Sciences et des Lettres de Varsovie XXVII.
^ Sula Benet (1975), “Early Diffusions and Folk Uses of Hemp”, in Vera Rubin; Lambros Comitas (eds.), Cannabis and Culture (PDF), Moutan, pp. 39–49

^ John McClintockJames Strong, eds. (1891), “Calamus”, Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature, vol. 2, Harper & Brothers, p. 17

^ John McClintockJames Strong, eds. (1891), “Cane”, Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature, vol. 2, Harper & Brothers, pp. 72–73

^ Emil G. Hirsch (1906), “REED”, in Isidore Singer; et al. (eds.), Jewish Encyclopedia, vol. 10, p. 346b

^ Ernest L. Abel (1980), Marihuana, the first twelve thousand years (PDF),
Springer, p. 27, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-10

External links
Sula Benet’s papers in the [New York University archives].

Further reading
Booth, M. (2003). Cannabis: A History. Doubleday. ISBN 1409084892.

Unprecedented Healing
Those who have used this oil, including many non-Christians have reported almost “miracle healing”… including relief from arthritis, autoimmune disease, diabetes, cancer, high blood pressure, prostate issues, Alzheimer’s, heart disease… and 51 other deadly condition – see the PROOF in the video above.

Why It Might Change What It Means to Be a Christian
For many Christians, this biblical breakthrough goes against everything they’ve ever believed… and they are torn, because this lost secret heals like nothing, they’ve ever seen… so they have to choose between their old beliefs, or their pain.

How The US Government Is Taking Control
The government has never been shy about protecting its interests, including PAC’s,
the IRS, big pharma, and left-wing agendas. And congress is aware of this breakthrough, in fact, they recently took out a patent on it, and now control the fate of this “ancient healing technology”.

The Exodus Effect is a complete at-home true holy anointed oil cannabis recipe book from Divine Origins Health where Pastor Andrew details the missing ingredients proof found in the Bible can unlock the secrets to a real CBD-based healing protocol.  

Did you know that human expectancy rates have dropped by nearly 375% since the times of the Old Testament? Did it ever occur to you to question the reality behind this concern? Interestingly, a pastor seems to have investigated this concern for well over 30 years, only to realize that a mishap took place when the bible was translated.
Individuals are told that this small mistake prevented everyone from finding a natural solution to health issues ranging from diabetes and autoimmune-related diseases to the potential threat of cancer. Want in on the action? Curious to see how this slight error could have a significant impact on your health?

This is where it is best to introduce The Exodus Effect:

What is the Exodus Effect?
The Exodus Effect is a guide that was put together to share God’s real anointed oil.
As per Pastor Andrew, Dr. Sula Benet found an apparent error in the bible in 1939.
This error entailed a mistranslated word that led society to categorize CBD as being marijuana. Though the mistake was caught much earlier, it was not corrected until
Pastor Andrew pinpointed it.

Found at ExodusError.com, the long-lost biblical secret is detailed during a lengthy
video about how there is undeniable proof of the secret’s holy healing power and how it was kept under lock and key for nearly two-thousand years. The “exodus error” discovery by Dr. Benet says there was a loss of translation from Hebrew to Greek languages where
it could change the entire meaning of the Bible.

The word that was mistranslated was “Kaneh Bosm”, where the two words “Kaneh”
and “Bosm” would eventually be fused into one word “Kanabos”, which ultimately evolves into today’s modern-day interpretation, Cannabis. From there, Pastor Andrew explains The Exodus Effect using Biblical references as comparing Adam and Eve’s Cain and Abel to marijuana and hemp where Cain (the bad son) was marijuana and Abel (the good son) is hemp.

Furthering the conversation within the video, Dr. Benet claims hemp is a God-given herb and was used in holy ceremonies such as the Feast of Tabernacles but was mistranslated from Kaneh Bosm to ‘Sweet Calamus’, which is all but a yellow desert flower with no medicinal properties. Pastor Andrew would give prime examples of where he saw this Kanabos (Cannabis) referenced within the Hebrew dictionary and ancient texts,
citing the following:

God said “You have not brought any [Kanabos] for me or lavished on me the fat of your sacrifices. But you have burdened me with your sins and wearied me with your offences” – Isaiah 43:23-24…

Then he cited:
I also saw references to Kanabos… or Cannabis… in Jeremiah 6:20, Ezekiel 27:19,
and it was even mentioned in the Song of Solomon.

And another:
Jeremiah 17:8 mentions a “tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots
by the river, and shall not see heat cometh, but her leaf shall be green, and shall not be disquieted in the year of drought…”
After referencing the ‘Biblical proof’, Pastor Andrew talks about The Exodus Effect’s missing ingredient in modern day terms by mentioning the hundreds of medical studies about cannabis having legitimate healing powers. Given the gravity of the biblical undertones and new-age scientific research, innovation and legal advancements,
The Exodus Effect believes it can help users make real true holy anointed oil from home using the missing cannabis ingredients by understanding that Cannabis isn’t only cannabis (much like Cain and Abel are not Adam and Eve), but it consists of marijuana and hemp, both differing what they provide and how they work within the body to deliver the perceived health benefits of CBD oil.

The Exodus Effect Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
The highly controversial Exodus Effect presentation from Pastor Andrew prompts
and warrants many questions that need to be addressed in a proper manner given
the biblical nature of the True Anointed Oil cannabis recipe book.

What makes the Exodus Effect stand out?
Given that consumers, in this case, individual Christians, are hesitant about using CBD, having discovered that it should have been included from the beginning makes the Exodus Effect unique. However, what makes this guide (i.e., the recipe) stand out is that CBD was combined with other ingredients with similar properties.
The premise of The Exodus Effect book for cannabis oil-infused recipes is based on
“THE long-lost Biblical ingredient God intended for us to use in anointed oil” and is described heavily within the official ‘miracle oil’ video.
What are the benefits of the Exodus Effect?
Now that a significant flaw has been identified in the original anointed oil recipe,
Pastor Andrew affirms the recently adjusted sacred anointing oil formula can aid in:

Alleviating any type of chronic pain
Enhancing sleep quality
Boosting individuals’ cognitive function
Achieving emotional freedom
Possibly healing rare diseases
Preventing cancer cells from spreading
Becoming closer to God

How long before the benefits are attained?
The benefits appear to hit one’s physical, emotional, cognitive, and mental health
among several others. That said, the average healing time is supposedly five days. 
Bear in mind that this can easily change depending on the severity of one’s health.

Is it a problem to lack knowledge of herbology?
No, Pastor Andrew avows that the recipe can be made using the simplest of tools
found in the very drawers of one’s kitchen.
So, it is unnecessary to have any knowledge of herbology.

How should the new anointed oil be ingested?
According to the claims made, the Exodus Effect offers 12 unique ways of ingesting
the new anointed oil. For those who prefer oral consumption, options include adding
it to one’s coffee or smoothie.
At the same time, for topical uses, it can be applied either directly on the skin or mixed with existing skincare products. For the time being, there is no information on how often one should use it and what the ideal dose per-use is.

What does the Exodus Effect come with?
For optimal results, Pastor Andrew is offering three bonuses and community
access alongside the Exodus Effect. Here’s a briefing of what these comprise of:  
Complete Exodus Effect System: Divine Healing Holy Anointing Oil Recipes Book.

What Is a Recipe for Making Holy Anointing Oil?
The Complete Exodus Effect System by Pastor Andrew of Divine Origins and Divine Healing Solutions helps users learn how to make holy anointing oil recipes using ingredients like myrrh, calamus, cinnamon, cassia and olive oil.
Holy anointing oil is crafted from a specific recipe that includes five ingredients: myrrh, cinnamon, calamus, cassia and olive oil. The recipe was revealed to Moses by God.
Holy oils are not merely oils that have been blessed but sacred materials that should be used with care.

In Exodus 30:23-33, God tells Moses how to make 4.33 gallons of anointing oil.
To make a smaller batch of holy oil, this recipe is reduced from gallons to drops.
The first ingredient is 50 drops of myrrh, an aromatic resin found in the Commiphora myrrha trees of Eastern Africa. The second ingredient is 25 drops of cinnamon.
Next, add 25 drops of calamus, a scented plant also known as sweet flag.
Then, add 50 drops of cassia, which is derived from the bark of an East Asian
tree called Cinnamomum cassia.
Finally, add 65 drops of Extra Virgin Olive Oil, and blend all five ingredients together.

This is a very precious and sacred oil that is to be used for sanctifying the tabernacle,
the ark of the Bible, the table, candlesticks and vessels used in religious ceremonies,
and the altars of the church or temple.
Oil made of this recipe was used to anoint Aaron and his sons, consecrating them
as priests. Anyone looking to make this oil should be warned that Exodus 30:32-33
forbids the oil to be used on anyone or anything unless it is to consecrate a priest. 

Holy Anointing Oil Recipe Instructions (wordpress.com)

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