In a revealing interview on Brighteon.com, Aaron Abke, a former third-generation evangelical pastor turned spiritual teacher, shared his transformative journey from mainstream Christian dogma to a deeper, more nuanced understanding of spirituality. His story highlights the internal conflicts many face when questioning long-held religious beliefs—conflicts that ultimately led him to reject fundamentalist theology in favor of a more universal, love-centered interpretation of Jesus’ teachings.
Abke grew up immersed in evangelical Christianity, leading worship by his early teens and attending Oral Roberts University to study theology. Yet, even as a young pastor, he struggled with contradictions in biblical teachings—such as the dissonance between Old Testament sacrifices and prophetic condemnations of ritual slaughter.
“I couldn’t reconcile a God who demanded blood offerings with the same God who said, ‘You do not delight in sacrifice, or else I would give it’ (Psalm 51),” Abke explained. His crisis of faith deepened when he encountered rigid fundamentalism in his first pastoral role, leading him to resign and embark on a quest for truth beyond institutional religion.
Abke’s research into early Christian texts, including the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew and the Dead Sea Scrolls, revealed a stark contrast between the historical Yeshua (Jesus) and the Pauline-influenced Christ of modern Christianity. He emphasized that Yeshua, a Jewish rabbi from Nazareth, preached a message of reciprocal love and ethical living—not the salvation-by-faith-alone doctrine later popularized by Paul.
“The first Christians were Nazarenes—Jewish followers of Yeshua who rejected temple sacrifices, practiced communal living, and upheld the Ten Commandments,” Abke noted. “Paul’s letters, many of which are forgeries, distorted this into a Greco-Roman theology that made Jesus a divine figure to appeal to pagan audiences.”
Abke and host Mike Adams critiqued the inconsistencies in mainstream Christianity, such as:
Both Abke and Adams stressed that truth must be internally consistent. “If God’s law is immutable, it can’t simultaneously demand animal sacrifices and condemn them,” Abke argued. He pointed to Yeshua’s Golden Rule (“The measure you give will be the measure you get back”) as the core of divine law—reciprocity, not arbitrary judgment.
Abke’s study of NDEs further dismantled evangelical dogma. “People who ‘die’ and return describe a life review centered on love and accountability—not creedal checkboxes,” he said. Even Christian pastors in NDEs often find themselves in distressing realms until they confront their own hypocrisy or lack of compassion.
Abke’s journey mirrors a growing awakening among spiritual seekers. As Adams observed, “There’s a red-pilling happening in spirituality.” For those questioning their faith, Abke offers a path forward:
Abke’s work bridges ancient wisdom and modern skepticism, urging a return to Yeshua’s original message: The Kingdom of Heaven is within you. As institutional Christianity grapples with declining trust, voices like Abke’s offer a radical yet deeply traditional alternative—one rooted in love, reason, and the fearless pursuit of truth.
Watch the full episode of the "Health Ranger Report" with Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and Aaron Abke as they talk about the history of Christian writings, the real Yeshua and why God's law go far beyond the common teachings of the modern church.
This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.
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