2012 Noahide dr. Vendyl Jones, Rabbi Y Gainsberg, Rabbi Yakov David Cohen Universal Noahide UN
Referral to the channel: OnepeopleOneworldmed ===== Original name: "Rabbi Y Gainsberg and Dr. Vendyl Jones interviewed by Rabbi Yakov David Cohen Universal Noahide UN" Description: Dr. Vendyl Jones talk with Rabbi Yizhock Gainsberg on his work in Israel and the Laws of Noah , the film Indiana Jones based on 2003- 26 Tishei 5664 Comments: Vendyl Jones is the most famous noahide (judaism for non-jewish people) in the English-speaking sector of the planet. In the 1950s, while serving as pastor in a Baptist church, Vendyl Jones began to seek out the Jewish sources and references of the Christian gospels, realizing that many apparently anti-Jewish statements therein were "omitted in more ancient manuscripts." He began to study with rabbis and even in a Talmud Torah (an elementary school for Jewish children), until he ultimately "resolved to learn, to know and to understand the Bible objectively, without any prejudices; to know what Jesus actually said in the language he spoke and what it literally meant to the people who heard him" [source: Vendyl Jones Research Institute]. He eventually became a Noahide, believing in the Judaic teaching that non-Jews must follow the seven specific Noahide laws [such as belief in one G-d and no murdering or stealing], while Jews must abide by the laws of the Torah. He established the Judaic-Christian Research Foundation, from which developed the Institute of Judaic-Christian Research (IJCR), which is now the Vendyl Jones Research Institute. His life goals began to take root when he learned, in 1964, that the Copper Scroll had been found in a cave at Qumran, Israel, and that it listed – in coded form – the hiding places of sacred articles such as the Ark of the Covenant. In April 1967, he moved his family to Israel, continuing his studies in the Department of Judaica at Hebrew University and becoming involved in archaeology. He aided the Israeli army during the Six Day War, when his color-blindness helped him detect camouflaged enemy tanks. He worked on many digs at Qumran and other Judean Desert sites, though he did not receive government support or funding. His most famous find was that of the Ketoret – 900 pounds of reddish powder with a uniquely strong fragrance that he said was the Ketoret, the 11-ingredient incense used in the Holy Temple. Though critics disputed his findings, they were supported by tests conducted at Weizmann Institute and Bar-Ilan University. Read more details: https://israel365news.com/303547/pulpits-tennessee-desert-israel-legacy-spiritual-maverick-vendyl-jones-lives-on-biblical-zionsim/ ===== Broadcast date:June 16, 2012
Referral to the channel: OnepeopleOneworldmed ===== Original name: "Rabbi Y Gainsberg and Dr. Vendyl Jones interviewed by Rabbi Yakov David Cohen Universal Noahide UN" Description: Dr. Vendyl Jones talk with Rabbi Yizhock Gainsberg on his work in Israel and the Laws of Noah , the film Indiana Jones based on 2003- 26 Tishei 5664 Comments: Vendyl Jones is the most famous noahide (judaism for non-jewish people) in the English-speaking sector of the planet. In the 1950s, while serving as pastor in a Baptist church, Vendyl Jones began to seek out the Jewish sources and references of the Christian gospels, realizing that many apparently anti-Jewish statements therein were "omitted in more ancient manuscripts." He began to study with rabbis and even in a Talmud Torah (an elementary school for Jewish children), until he ultimately "resolved to learn, to know and to understand the Bible objectively, without any prejudices; to know what Jesus actually said in the language he spoke and what it literally meant to the people who heard him" [source: Vendyl Jones Research Institute]. He eventually became a Noahide, believing in the Judaic teaching that non-Jews must follow the seven specific Noahide laws [such as belief in one G-d and no murdering or stealing], while Jews must abide by the laws of the Torah. He established the Judaic-Christian Research Foundation, from which developed the Institute of Judaic-Christian Research (IJCR), which is now the Vendyl Jones Research Institute. His life goals began to take root when he learned, in 1964, that the Copper Scroll had been found in a cave at Qumran, Israel, and that it listed – in coded form – the hiding places of sacred articles such as the Ark of the Covenant. In April 1967, he moved his family to Israel, continuing his studies in the Department of Judaica at Hebrew University and becoming involved in archaeology. He aided the Israeli army during the Six Day War, when his color-blindness helped him detect camouflaged enemy tanks. He worked on many digs at Qumran and other Judean Desert sites, though he did not receive government support or funding. His most famous find was that of the Ketoret – 900 pounds of reddish powder with a uniquely strong fragrance that he said was the Ketoret, the 11-ingredient incense used in the Holy Temple. Though critics disputed his findings, they were supported by tests conducted at Weizmann Institute and Bar-Ilan University. Read more details: https://israel365news.com/303547/pulpits-tennessee-desert-israel-legacy-spiritual-maverick-vendyl-jones-lives-on-biblical-zionsim/ ===== Broadcast date:June 16, 2012
