From Genesis to Revelation. Three Heirs of Abraham — Three Destinies, One God
There is a rivalry older than any empire, older than any nation, older than any war that history has recorded. It began before two brothers had drawn their first breath — spoken over them by God Himself before either had done good or evil — and it has not yet ended. This book is the story of that rivalry, traced from its first moment in the tent of Abraham to its final resolution in the last pages of Revelation.
Three men. Three lines. Three destinies. Ishmael, the firstborn by Hagar — blessed with twelve princes and a great nation, redirected but never abandoned. Esau, the twin who sold his birthright for a bowl of red stew and spent four thousand years trying to take back what he had thrown away with both hands. And Jacob-Israel, the covenant heir, the limping wrestler, the man who would not let go — whose descendants carried the promises of Abraham through the Caucasus and into the frozen north, into the royal houses and legal traditions and missionary movements that built the civilisation of the Christian West.
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https://www.norvision.no/product/from-genesis-to-revelation/
The rivalry that began before two brothers were born has shaped every chapter of recorded history — and its final chapter is being written now, today.
This is not a book that repeats what others have said. The genealogical research it presents — tracing the Habsburg dynasty to Zerah ben Judah, connecting Odin to the Dardanian-Trojan migration 28 generations from the Caucasian corridor, documenting the Giske clan’s thread from the Gulating Law of 1024 through Magna Carta to the Bill of Rights — is original scholarship, published for the first time in the King David Legacy Series. It places before the reader a continuous and unbroken genealogical chain from the tent of Abraham to the constitutional frameworks of the modern Western world.
“And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing.”
— Genesis 12:2
But this book is more than genealogy. It is a spiritual testament — twenty-five years of study directed by the Holy Spirit, written in the sunset hours of one man’s time on earth, for the generation that is living through the fulfilment of the prophecies it describes. Jacob’s Trouble is not a future event. It is the present hour. The Great Replacement, the dismantling of Christian civilisation, the breaking of the yoke described in Genesis 27:40 — these are the chapters of Revelation being enacted in real time, by the same players, on the same stage, that Scripture identified four thousand years ago.
The book does not end in despair. It ends where Scripture ends — with God’s verdict, God’s outcome, and God’s invitation to the remnant of every line of Abraham to stand on the right side of the only history that finally matters. Esau will be judged. Ishmael has a door open to him. And Jacob-Israel — limping, wrestling, refusing still to let go — will be vindicated by the God who wrote the story before the first word of it was spoken.
“And the nations of them which are saved shall walk in the light of it: and the kings of the earth do bring their glory and honour into it.”
— Revelation 21:24
From Genesis to Revelation. The same story. The same God. The same promise. And the same question He has always put to those with eyes to see it:
Will you trust Him?
Carrie Underwood – How Great Thou Art (feat. Vince Gill)
