The Three Humanities: The Restoration of the First Humanity in Yahuah’s Plan Volume 2
The Three Humanities™ – Book 4, Chapter 12: The Rise of the Kings and the Establishment of the Covenant Throne
This chapter explores the rise of the kings and the establishment of the covenant throne, revealing authority, promise, and the shaping of the messianic line.
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How Yahuah Uses Imperfect Kings to Advance the Plan of Redemption and Secure the Line of the Messiah
12.1 Saul — The King of the People’s Choice
Saul is tall, handsome, strong, and outwardly impressive. Yasharal wants a king “like the nations,” so Yahuah grants their request. Saul begins well but quickly disobeys, rebels, acts in pride, makes forbidden sacrifices, and refuses to destroy Amalek (a giant-influenced people). His failure proves that human kingship without obedience leads to ruin. The kingdom must be given to a man after Yahuah’s own heart.
12.2 Dawid — The Giant Slayer, Demon-Chaser, and Prototype of the Messiah – Dawid’s Early Calling and Anointing
Dawid is a shepherd boy, the youngest of his brothers, overlooked, yet chosen. He rises not through war but through anointing: “For Yahuah looks not on the outward appearance, but on the heart.” — 1 Samuel 16:7
12.3 Dawid and Saul — The Harp That Drives Out Demons
When Saul becomes spiritually corrupted and heavily oppressed and demon possessed, Scripture reveals: “An evil spirit from Yahuah troubled him.” — 1 Samuel 16:14 Saul, who had aligned himself with Nephilim-influenced nations, becomes tormented by unclean spirits. Dawid is brought into Saul’s service, and only Dawid has the spiritual authority to bring relief: “And when David played the harp, the evil spirit departed from Saul.” — 1 Samuel 16:23 This is not mere music. It is spiritual warfare. Dawid’s harp becomes a prophetic instrument, chasing demons, restoring peace, and exposing the darkness in Saul’s soul. This reveals Dawid’s unique calling: he is chosen to confront both giants in the flesh and giants in the spirit.
12.4 Dawid vs. Goliath — The Fall of the Last Great Giant
Goliath, a descendant of the Nephilim, is over 9 feet tall, armored like a tank, a trained killer, and a symbol of demonic defiance. Dawid enters the battlefield with a sling, stones, faith, and the Name of Yahuah. He declares: “You come to me with sword and spear… but I come to you in the Name of Yahuah.” — 1 Samuel 17:45 When Dawid crushes the giant’s skull, the last great Philistine giant falls, the Rephaim warriors scatter, the spiritual stronghold in Philistia fractures, and Genesis 3:15 is fulfilled again. Dawid becomes the king who finishes Yahusha son of Nun’s mission, the warrior who crushes the final Nephilim threats, and the ancestor of the Messiah.
12.5 Dawid’s Sin — The Fracture in the King After Yahuah’s Heart
Though Yahuah says, “Dawid is a man after My own heart,” Dawid still falls into deadly sin. He sees Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah, and orchestrates a plan that leads to adultery, deception, and Uriah’s death in battle. Yahuah judges this act severely: the first child of that union is struck and dies. This death becomes a sobering reminder: sin always carries consequences—especially in the kingly line.
12.6 Solomon — The Second Child of Dawid and Bathsheba
The second child born to Dawid and Bathsheba is Solomon, the one chosen by Yahuah to continue the royal line. This is profound: the first child dies → judgment. The second child lives → mercy and restoration. Through Solomon, the throne continues. Through this line, Yahusha Ha’Mashiyach will come. This shows the Plan of Salvation at work: Yahuah redeems even the darkest failures to establish His eternal purpose.
12.7 The Kingdom of Dawid — A Sanctuary for the Plan of Salvation
Under Dawid, Jerusalem is established, the ark finds rest, worship is restored, boundaries are secured, and enemies subdued. The land once polluted by giants becomes the throne of the king after Yahuah’s heart, the prophetic foundation of Messiah’s kingdom, and the platform for the world’s salvation. Every victory Dawid achieves prepares the way for the birth of Yahusha Ha’Mashiyach centuries later.
12.8 Solomon — The Kingdom Reaches Its Golden Height
Solomon builds the Temple. The nations come to hear his wisdom. Peace and prosperity flourish. But Solomon marries foreign wives from idolatrous nations, pagan cultures, and Nephilim-influenced bloodlines. He builds altars to Molech, Ashtoreth, and Kemosh. His divided heart begins the fracture of the kingdom. The Plan of Salvation continues—but human failure always threatens it.
12.8 From Judges to Kings, Yahuah’s Plan Advances Despite Human Rebellion
The entire era—from Yahusha son of Nun through the judges to Dawid and Solomon—reveals the Third Humanity (mixed, unstable, easily corrupted), the Second Humanity (Nephilim nations resisting), and the First Humanity (the covenant seed advancing slowly but surely). At every stage, Yahuah uses failure to advance redemption. Yahuah uses broken people to build His kingdom. Yahuah turns rebellion into opportunity. Yahuah transforms chaos into salvation. From the crushing of Goliath, to the establishment of Jerusalem, to the building of the Temple—every event prepares the way for the arrival of Yahusha, the Seed who will crush the nachash forever.
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