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מִכְנָסַיִים קְצָרִים לִיצוֹר
All honor, glory, and praise to 𐤉𐤄𐤅𐤄, through 𐤉𐤄𐤅𐤔𐤅𐤏, who is the reason and foundation for all we do. I was blessed to be with my Assembly in Austin as we celebrated the Feast of Dedication with the Austin Assembly. We shared fellowship, the Word, food, and powerful performances, coming together in unity and gratitude to remember the faithfulness of our Elohim. It was truly a beautiful, set-apart time with family.
Scientists are calling her Eve, but reluctantly. The name evokes too many wrong images-- the weak-willed figure in Genesis, the milk-skinned beauty in Renaissance art, the voluptuary gardener in "Paradise Lost" who was all "softness" and "meek surrender" and waist-length "gold tresses." The scientists' Eve- subject of one of the most provocative anthropological theories in a decade- was more likely a dark-haired, black-skinned woman, roaming a hot savanna in search of food. She was as muscular as Martina Navratilova, maybe stronger; she might have torn animals apart with her hands, although she probably preferred to use stone tools. She was not the only woman on earth, nor necessarily the most attractive or maternal. She was simply the most fruitful if that is measured by success in propagating a particular set of genes. Hers seem to be in all humans living today: 5 billion blood relatives. She was, by one rough estimate, your 10,000th great-grandmother.





