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The Upward Journey

pdf:cb92ef305dd0a2e04ebc6a08612f047d95834769e71acf67aa24149c71476688Shane Vaughn2024-06-16Booklet

STANDALONE BOOK

  • (secondary) Romans 3:2Romans 3:2, Psalm 119:142, John 14:2, Exodus 20:8-10, Numbers 21:8, John 3:14-15, Galatians 3:13, Isaiah 28:9-10, Revelation 12:9, Genesis 4:4-5, Genesis 25:34, Hebrews 12:16-17, Jeremiah 31:33, Isaiah 58:12, Psalm 1, Matthew 3:10, Acts 3:21, James 2:17

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THE UPWARD JOURNEY A Guide to Hebraic Biblical Interpretation and the Restoration of All Things By Shane Vaughn Dedication To the Beloved Saints, my partners in the gospel of the Kingdom, who have taken this upward journey with me— To those who refuse to stay in the first circle... To the remnant who will not settle for religion when relationship is calling... To every seeker who heard the whisper of the Tree and followed it upward— despite the ridicule, despite the loss, despite the loneliness... To the Bride, whose hunger for holiness compels her to ascend even when others are satisfied with “good”... And most of all— To Yahshua, our High Priest, our Pattern Son, the Vortex Himself, who opened the gate back to the Garden and planted His life within us so that we too might rise. This journey is for you. Copyright © 2025 Shane Vaughn / First Harvest Ministries All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be repro- duced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without prior written permission of the publisher, except for brief quotations used in reviews or teaching materials. Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture quotations are from the Re- stored Name King James Version or are adapted for clarity using sacred names. For more information, visit: • www.FirstHarvestChurch.org • www.HisComingKingdom.com Printed in the United States of America Table of ConTenTs • Dedication • Introduction: The Journey Begins • Chapter One: How to Interpret the Bible • Chapter Two: The Hebrew Layers – PARDES • Chapter Three: The Two Trees • Conclusion: Back to the Garden • Appendix: Study Questions InTRoDUCTIon: The JoURney begIns You are holding in your hands an invitation. Not an invitation to learn more information—you have plen- ty of that. Not an invitation to another denomination—you’ve probably tried enough of those. This is an invitation to climb. The title of this book is not The Forward Journey or The Next Steps. It is The Upward Journey. And there is a reason for that. The path Yahweh is calling His remnant to walk is not horizontal. It is vertical. It does not merely move you from one set of beliefs to another—it elevates you from one realm of understanding to a higher one. For too long, the church has been satisfied with surface-level Christianity. We have memorized Bible verses without under- standing their Hebrew context. We have sung worship songs without knowing the appointed times they celebrate. We have quoted Scripture without climbing into its depths. And we have called it “mature faith.” But the Spirit is stirring something in the earth. Across every nation, in every tongue, among every tribe—there is a rem- nant rising. These are not people looking for a new religion. They are people hungry for restoration. They want to return to the ancient paths. They want to climb back to the Tree. This book is written for them. For you. What This Book Is This book is a primer—a foundation. It will teach you how to interpret the Scriptures the way the Hebrews interpreted them. It will introduce you to the four levels of biblical under- standing known as PARDES. It will show you the difference between the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge—and why that distinction matters more now than ever. And it will invite you, at every turn, to go higher. This is not exhaustive scholarship. It is apostolic teach- ing—designed to awaken, equip, and propel you upward. You will find more questions than answers in some places. That is intentional. The Spirit teaches progressively, and this book is designed to start conversations, not end them. What This Book Is Not This book is not an attack on your church, your pastor, or your denomination. Many wonderful believers worship in congregations that have not yet received this revelation. Yah- weh loves them. He is working with them. And many of them are being led, even now, toward the same truths you are dis- covering. This book is also not a license to become arrogant. One of the greatest dangers of ascending in revelation is the tempta- tion to despise those still climbing behind you. That spirit is not of Yahweh. The upward journey produces humility, not pride. If you find yourself looking down on others, you have not truly gone up. The Shape of the Journey The Hebrew mind does not think in straight lines. It thinks in cycles. The festivals repeat every year. The Torah portions cycle through annually. The generations echo the patterns of their fathers. And the journey of sanctification spirals up- ward—returning to the same truths, but encountering them at higher levels each time. This is why you can read a Scripture passage you’ve read a hundred times and suddenly see something you never saw before. You haven’t changed the text. You’ve changed your altitude. You are reading from a higher vantage point. The journey you are beginning—or continuing—is not a race. It is an ascent. And as you climb, everything will look different. The Bible will come alive. The feasts will become personal. The Torah will become not a burden, but a delight. And the Messiah Himself will become clearer than ever. A Word of Caution Before you turn another page, I must give you a warning. This journey will cost you something. It may cost you friendships. It may cost you your church home. It may cost you reputation, comfort, and the approval of those you love. Not everyone will understand. Not every- one will follow. And some will oppose you with surprising intensity. But the rewards are greater than the costs. What awaits you on this journey is not merely intellectual satisfaction. It is intimacy with the Father. It is alignment with His calendar, His covenants, and His commands. It is the priv- ilege of being part of a remnant Bride who is preparing herself for the return of her King. The next circle is calling. The staircase is lit. Go up. CHAPTER ONE: How to Interpret the Bible Western vs. Eastern Thought Why are there over 800 Christian denominations—all read- ing the same Bible but arriving at radically different interpre- tations? Because every reader wears a set of cultural and doctrinal “glasses.” Just as Supreme Court justices interpret the U.S. Constitu- tion differently based on their judicial philosophies—original- ists reading the text one way, living constitutionalists reading it another—so too does every Bible reader bring a framework to the text. A Baptist reads the Bible through Baptist lenses. A Catholic reads it through Roman tradition. A Pentecostal reads it through the grid of emotional experience. A Lutheran reads it through the Reformation. And a prosperity preacher reads it through the lens of personal benefit. None of them are reading the Bible wrong because they are reading it. They are reading it wrong because they are reading it Western. The Bible was not written by Westerners. It was not written for Westerners. It was not written in a Western language, in a Western culture, or with a Western worldview. Every writer of the Bible—from Moses to Malachi, from Matthew to John— was Hebrew. They thought in Hebrew patterns, used Hebrew idioms, and assumed a Hebrew reader. If you want to interpret the Bible as it was meant to be un- derstood, you must take off your denominational glasses and adopt a Hebrew mindset. Linear vs. Cyclical Thinking The Western mind is linear. It moves from Point A to Point B to Point C. It sees time as a straight line: past on the left, future on the right, with the present as a moving dot between them. This is how we teach history, how we plan projects, and how we read novels. But the Hebrew mind is cyclical. It sees time as a spiral—a wheel within a wheel. The past is not behind you; it is beneath you. The future is not ahead of you; it is above you. And the present is not a dot on a line; it is a ring on a ladder. This is why Yahweh gave Israel the festivals. They are not arbitrary holidays. They are prophetic markers that repeat every year, teaching the same truths at deeper levels with each cycle. Passover is not just a memorial of Egypt—it is a shad- ow of the cross, a prophecy of the second exodus, and a per- sonal invitation to leave bondage every single year. This is why Yahweh made the seasons repeat. Spring, sum- mer, fall, winter—not as monotony, but as curriculum. Each cycle is an opportunity to learn what you missed the last time around. This is why Israel circled Jericho seven times before the walls fell. Not because walking in circles has magical pow- er, but because Yahweh teaches in cycles. The seventh time around was not the same as the first. The first circle was preparation. The seventh was completion. And this is why the Bible is not chronological in the way we expect. Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 both describe creation—but from different angles. The Gospels tell the same story four times, with variations, not because the authors couldn’t agree, but because each telling adds a layer. The book of Revela- tion echoes Genesis in reverse, cycling back to the beginning while ascending to the end. If you read the Bible expecting a straight line, you will be confused. But if you read it expecting spirals, patterns, and cy- cles, it will unfold before you like a flower blooming in slow motion. The Diamond of Revelation The Word of Yahweh is like a diamond. When you hold it to the light, it does not reflect a single beam—it refracts a spec- trum. A single Scripture passage can contain a literal mean- ing, a prophetic shadow, a personal application, and a cosmic mystery—all at once. Consider the Passover lamb: On the literal level, it was a lamb killed in Egypt to protect the firstborn of Israel. On the prophetic level, it was a shadow of Yahshua, the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world. On the personal level, it is an invitation to apply the blood to your own life—to your household, your decisions, your doorposts. On the cosmic level, it is part of the great redemption story that stretches from Eden to the New Jerusalem. One event. Four dimensions. And every layer is true. If you read the Bible expecting just one layer, you will get something. But you will miss the treasure. The diamond has many facets, and each facet reflects a different color of light. The mature believer learns to turn the diamond slowly, watch- ing the colors shift and deepen. This is why Yahweh gave the Word to the Hebrews—a people trained by agriculture, by harvests, by family lineag- es, and by generations. They knew that truth comes in cycles and increments. They knew that a seed planted today would bear fruit in another season. They knew that what the father learned, the son would live, and the grandson would embody. The Western church wants revelation now, complete, and final. The Hebrew sage knows that revelation unfolds across a lifetime, a generation, and an age. The Deception of Division One of the greatest deceptions in the modern church is that the Bible is split. The Old is for the Jews. The New is for the Christians. That split is Satanic in origin. Satan’s plan was never to destroy the Word of Yah- weh—just to divide it. When you divide the Bible, you destroy its integrity. The Word becomes schizophrenic. The Elohim of the Old Tes- tament seems harsh, angry, and legalistic. The Elohim of the New seems soft, permissive, and gracious. The church is left confused—preaching grace but living in defeat, claiming righ- teousness but walking in rebellion, singing about victory while enslaved to sin. But Yahweh’s Word is not two books. It is one Abrahamic covenant, revealed in layers, written in types, shadows, and fulfillments. The New Testament is not new in content. It is new in application. It is not a replacement. It is an elevation. The Torah was not abolished. It was transposed. It was taken from tablets of stone and written upon tablets of the heart. The sacrifices were not discarded—they were fulfilled in the one perfect sacrifice. The priesthood was not eliminated—it was transferred to a higher order. The holy days were not can- celled—they were infused with prophetic meaning that is still unfolding. The upward journey begins not with what is new—but with what is ancient. The Spiral Staircase of Truth Yahweh does not teach in straight lines. He teaches in spirals. That is why Israel circled Jericho seven times. That is why the festivals repeat every year. That is why prophecy echoes from Genesis to Revelation and back again. That is why the same patterns appear in Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, and Yahshua. The church teaches that history is a line. The Bible teaches that history is a wheel. Ezekiel saw a wheel within a wheel. The seasons of Yahweh spin like cogs. They rotate. But not in place. They rotate upward. Like a spiral staircase. You do not graduate from one level and leave it behind. You rise upon it. What you learned last year, you will circle back to next year—but you will understand it differ- ently. You will live it deeper. You will embody it more fully. This is how truth sanctifies. This is the nature of the Word. It repeats in higher glory. The first time you kept Passover after coming into this truth, you understood it as a memorial. The fifth time, you under- stood it as prophecy. The tenth time, you understood it as identity. The twentieth time, you began to become the unleav- ened bread. That is the spiral. That is the staircase. That is the journey. The Tale of Two Trees There are only two root systems in the religious world: Jeru- salem and Rome. Jerusalem is the Tree of Life. It is the root. It is the Torah, the Prophets, the Sabbaths, the Feasts, the covenants. It is the original faith once delivered to the saints. It is Hebrew. It is ancient. It is holy. Rome is the Tree of Knowledge. It is appearance. It is re- ligion. It is tradition. It is counterfeit holiness wrapped in impressive garments. It changed the calendar. It changed the holidays. It replaced Passover with Easter. It replaced the Sab- bath with Sunday. It replaced the Tree of Life with the Tree of Knowledge—and called it Christianity. The Roman system hated the Jerusalem church. They called the commandments “Jewish.” They declared the Torah obso- lete. They persecuted Sabbath-keepers. They replaced the He- brew feasts with pagan festivals dressed in Christian clothing. And when the Protestants left Rome in the Reformation, they left in name—but not in doctrine. They brought Sunday, Christmas, Easter, and the gospel of grace-without-obedience into their new movements. They preach a Messiah discon- nected from His Torah. They celebrate a faith severed from its root. We must return to the root. We must grow upward from the original seed. We must identify which tree we are eating from—and make the conscious choice to return to the Tree of Life. Patterns of Thought: Cultural Context Matters Every culture has its idioms, metaphors, and patterns of speech. When an African American sister says, “Girl, she put her foot in that food,” she means it tastes amazing. But to someone unfamiliar with that idiom, it sounds disgusting. Why? Cultural context. The same is true of the Bible. If you read it with a West- ern, English-speaking mindset, you will misinterpret idioms, meanings, and intentions. When Yahshua said, “In My Father’s house are many mansions,” the Western mind pictures luxury estates in the sky. But the Hebrew culture understood bet av—the father’s household—as a family structure. The Eastern mind un- derstand it as the Temple of Yahweh. The “mansions” were dwelling places within the father’s compound, rooms add- ed when sons married or chambers of the priesthood within the temple. Yahshua was not promising real estate. He was promising family, He was promising room in the new priestly order. He was saying, “There is room for you in the Father’s household. You belong.” When the Psalmist wrote, “The heavens declare the glory of Elohim,” the Hebrew reader understood that the stars were not just decorative—they were prophetic. The constellations told a story. The Mazzaroth proclaimed the gospel before a single word of Scripture was written. You cannot understand the Bible without under- standing the culture that wrote it. And you cannot climb the staircase without learning to think like those who built it. Hebrew Is the Key Every writer of the Bible was steeped in a Hebrew world- view. They thought in Hebrew patterns, used Hebrew idioms, and assumed a Hebrew reader. If you want to understand their writings, you must study their thought patterns. You must know the family, farm, and feast culture they lived in. You must interpret their words from their world. This does not mean you must learn to speak Hebrew (though it helps). It means you must learn to think Hebraically. You must recognize patterns, see cycles, understand idioms, and honor the context. The good news is that the Spirit who inspired the Word is the same Spirit who will teach you the Word. He will guide you into all truth—if you are willing to unlearn what Rome taught you and relearn what Jerusalem preserved. Interpreting by the Spirit To interpret the Bible correctly, you must be begotten of the Spirit. And that Spirit will not contradict the Torah. The Holy Spirit does not lead you away from Yahweh’s Word. It leads you into it. Yahshua promised that when the Spirit came, He would guide us into all truth. Not some truth. Not convenient truth. All truth. And since the Torah is called “truth” (Psalm 119:142), the Spirit will lead you deeper into Torah, not away from it. The Spirit will guide you through the levels of revelation. 1. First the literal (Peshat). 2. Then the hint (Remez). 3. Then the teaching (Drash). 4. Then the mystery (Sod). We will explore these four levels in detail in the next chapter. You cannot interpret the deep things of Yahweh if you are still eating from the surface. You must submit to the Spirit and let Him walk you through the ladder of light. Every verse is a gate. Every word is a door. You climb them by surrender. Start at the Bottom. Climb to the Top. The Torah is the foundation. Yahshua is the cornerstone. The Holy Spirit is the fire that lifts the structure. This journey will take you from being a “New Testament Christian” to becoming a Whole Word Believer. It will change how you read. It will change how you worship. It will change how you walk out your daily life. You will not abandon the New Testament. You will under- stand it better than ever before—because you will finally see what it is built upon. The next circle is calling. Go up. ChaPTeR TWo: The hebReW layeRs – PaRDes The Language of the Ladder If you’ve walked in the Spirit for any length of time, you’ve probably asked: Why do some people read the Bible and come away unchanged, while others read it and become trans- formed? The answer lies in how we read. Most believers read their Bible in one dimension. They read it flat, from left to right, line by line, verse by verse—like a Western novel. But the Word of Yahweh was never meant to be consumed like a paperback. It is not linear. It is layered. It is encoded. It is alive. And to the Hebrews, who were entrusted with the oracles of Yahweh (Romans 3:2), the method of interpretation was never a mystery. It was a map. That map is called PARDES. What Is PARDES? דְרַּפ( PARDES סֵּ) is a Hebrew word that means «orchard» or «paradise.» It is also an acronym that describes four ascending levels of biblical understanding: P – Peshat (טָׁשְּפ): The simple, literal, plain meaning R – Remez (זֶמֶר): The hint, allusion, or symbolic meaning D – Drashשָרְּד( ׁ): The comparative, homiletical, teaching meaning S – Sod (דוֹס): The secret, hidden, mystical meaning But do not picture these as four layers stacked like bricks. Picture them as circles in a spiral—like the growth rings of a tree. The Sod does not replace the Peshat—it encircles it. Each layer builds upon the last, without contradiction or aban- donment. A tree does not shed its inner rings as it grows. Neither does truth. The First Level: Peshat – The Plain Meaning This is where everyone starts. The Peshat is what the words say. Plain and simple. It is the surface meaning, the grammatical sense, the straightforward reading. When Yahshua says, “Love your neighbor as yourself,” the Peshat says: show kindness to those around you. When Moses writes, “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy,” the Peshat says: set apart the seventh day. When David declares, “YAHWEH is my shepherd,” the Peshat says: Yahweh guides and provides for me. The Peshat is the milk of the Word—the beginner’s lev- el. It is necessary. Every truth must begin here. But it is not sufficient. If the church remains at this elementary level, it becomes one of two things: legalistic or simplistic. Legalistic be- lievers obsess over the words and miss the Word. Simplistic believers are satisfied with shallow understanding and never grow. Peshat alone will not build the remnant Bride. It will keep her fed—but it will not mature her. The Second Level: Remez – The Hint The second level is Remez. It means “hint” or “allusion.” This is where the Scriptures begin to whisper. A phrase stands out. A detail stirs your spirit. Something beneath the surface catches your attention. It’s not just what the text says—it’s what it suggests. When Yahshua said, “In my Father’s house are many man- sions,” the Peshat believer dreams of literal heavenly real estate. But the Remez listener hears a hint—maybe the house is a family of priest. Maybe the mansions are chambers pre- prated to house the priesthood of Yahs people. Maybe Yahsh- ua is describing not a location, but a relationship. When Genesis records that Abraham bound Isaac on the al- tar, the Peshat reader sees a test of faith. But the Remez reader notices that Isaac carried the wood up the mountain... just as Yahshua would carry the wood of His cross. A hint. A whisper. A shadow. When Ruth lay at the feet of Boaz on the threshing floor, the Peshat sees a cultural custom. The Remez sees a Bride posi- tioning herself at the feet of her Redeemer during the harvest season—a prophetic picture of the end-time church. The Remez is the doorway into revelation. It pulls you beyond the ink and into the atmosphere behind the words. It trains your spiritual ears to hear what the text is implying. The Third Level: Drash – The Teaching Now comes the level of study. Drash means “to seek, to in- quire, to compare.” This is the theological level—where we connect dots between Moses and Matthew, between Torah and Testimony, between prophecy and fulfillment. A Drash interpreter takes “mansion” and traces it through the Hebrew Scriptures. They study the word for “house”—bet av—and discover it means “father’s household.” They pull together what Paul said in Ephesians about Yahweh building a house of living stones. They don’t just receive—they search. A Drash interpreter reads about the bronze serpent Moses lifted in the wilderness and connects it to Yahshua’s words: “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up.” They compare Jonah’s three days in the belly of the fish to Yahshua’s three days in the heart of the earth. They see Joseph’s betrayal, exile, and exaltation as a pattern for the Messiah’s journey. This is the level of line upon line, precept upon precept (Isa- iah 28:10). This is where systematic theology is born— where doctrines are constructed by comparing Scripture with Scripture. And yet, it is still not the top. The Fourth Level: Sod – The Secret Now we ascend to the highest circle: Sod. Sod means “secret” or “mystery.” It is not earned by intellect. It is revealed by intimacy. This level belongs to the Bride. Psalm 25:14 says, “The secret (sod) of YAHWEH is with them that fear Him; and He will show them His covenant.” At the Sod level, the Word becomes a voice. That moment when verses you’ve read your entire life suddenly come alive and rearrange your entire worldview. You’re no longer reading for information—you’re reading for transfor- mation. At Sod, you don’t just understand that Yahshua is the Pass- over Lamb—you become unleavened. You don’t just know that the Sabbath is a sign—you fully anticipate the coming rest it represents. You don’t just learn about the tabernacle— you realize you are the tabernacle. But beware: Sod is not for show. It is not for ego. It is not a playground for spiritual mystics who seek experience without obedience. That is how you get spiritual GMO—a hybrid of revelation with no root in truth. Yahweh does not hand out mysteries to the casual reader. He reveals them to the weaned, to the hungry, to those who have been faithful at the lower levels. This level does not belong to the immature spiritualist, it is reserved for those who have earned it through diligent study of His Word. If you have failed on the first three levels you will become a spiritualist dressed up as a true believer, deceiving many with your deep revelations that cannot be supported by the previous three levels. Much harm is being done to the body of Messiah due to this age of internet prophets who have no understand- ing of Torah and yet they try to understand the Spirit. I have often found that most people who have deep revela- tions are not part of a local assembly with a fully functioning torah observant government in place. This level of under- standing must be tied to local or structured scriptual account- ability. The secret level without structure is spiritual law- lessness. But the structured Word without the Spirit is reli- gious death. The Rule of Advancement There is a divine rule in PARDES. It is called the Rule of Advancement: You may ascend to a higher level, but only if you can bring your revelation all the way back down to Peshat. In other words, if your Sod cannot be grounded in the stud- ied and proven meaning of Scripture—it’s not revelation. It’s delusion. This is how the end-time Bride is protected from false prophets, false doctrines, and mystical seduction. Every pro- phetic insight must be traceable to clear text. Yahweh is not the author of confusion. The first thing I ask anyone who has had a divine revelation in the assembly, have you submitted it for testing from The Word with your Elders, Pastors or Apostle? Because the heart of man is decietfully wicked. Even the Apostle Paul whom had direct revelation as an Apostle had to submit it to the Word and go to Jerusalem to the Apostles for their approval of his revelations before he was permitted to teach them to the saints. If someone tells you they received a “revelation” that contradicts the plain meaning of Torah, reject it. If a teacher claims a “deeper truth” that abolishes the command- ments, flee from them. If a prophet speaks mysteries that cannot be anchored in Scripture, they are not speaking for Yahweh. The Sod confirms the Peshat. It does not contradict it. A Full Example: John 14:2 Let’s apply PARDES to one of the most beloved verses in Scripture: “In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.” — John 14:2 Peshat (Literal): Yahshua is telling His disciples that heav- en has room for them. There are many dwelling places in the Father’s house, and Yahshua is going ahead to prepare one for each of them. Remez (Hint): The phrase “Father’s house” (bet av) is a Hebrew idiom for a family household. In ancient Israel, when a son became engaged, he would return to his father’s house and add a room for his bride. He would not return for her until his father approved the dwelling. This hints at the betrothal imagery: Yahshua is the bridegroom, we are the bride, and He is preparing our dwelling in the Father’s household. This ties together perfectly as well with the Fathers House being known as the temple of Israel. This temple housed the priesthood that would work at the temple, known as chambers or dwelling places within the House of Yahweh. Drash (Teaching): When we compare this passage with other Scriptures, a fuller picture emerges. In Ephesians 2:19- 22, Paul describes believers as “the household of Yahweh,” being built together as a holy temple. In 1 Peter 2:5, we are called “living stones” being built into a spiritual house. The “mansions” are not merely rooms—they are people. Yahweh is building a family, and each believer is a dwelling place. Sod (Secret): We are becoming the dwelling places of Yahweh. Not only in the future—but now. The Holy Spirit is constructing a place where Yahweh can live—and that place is you. You are the mansion. The preparation Yahshua spoke of is not carpentry in heaven—it is sanctification on earth. He is preparing you to be a fit dwelling for the Most High. The Sod is not escapism. It is embodiment. It does not take you away from the Word—it brings the Word into you. A Second Example: The Sabbath Let’s apply PARDES to the Sabbath commandment: “Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work: but the seventh day is the sabbath of YAHWEH thy Elohim.” — Exodus 20:8-10 Peshat (Literal): Work for six days. Rest on the seventh. Keep it set apart for Yahweh. This is a plain command with practical application. Remez (Hint): The word “remember” (zakar) is significant. Yahweh did not say “observe” or “keep” here—He said “re- member.” This hints that the Sabbath existed before Sinai. In- deed, Genesis 2:2-3 shows Yahweh resting on the seventh day at creation. The Sabbath is not merely a Jewish institution—it is a creation ordinance for all mankind. Drash (Teaching): When we compare Sabbath passages across Scripture, we see a pattern. In Hebrews 4, the writer speaks of a “Sabbath rest” that remains for the people of Yah- weh—a rest entered by faith, not works. In Isaiah 58, Sab- bath-keeping is connected to calling it a “delight” and being raised up to “ride on the heights of the earth.” In Ezekiel 20, the Sabbath is called a “sign” between Yahweh and His peo- ple. The teaching deepens: the Sabbath is not just a day—it is a covenant marker, a prophetic statement of identity. Sod (Secret): The Sabbath is a picture of the Millenni- al Kingdom. As Yahweh worked six days and rested on the seventh, so human history will span six thousand years before the great Sabbath—the thousand-year reign of Messiah. When you keep the weekly Sabbath, you are rehearsing the age to come. You are declaring that you belong to the kingdom that is coming. You are entering, in type and shadow, the rest that will one day cover the earth. A Third Example: The Bronze Serpent “And YAHWEH said unto Moses, Make thee a fiery serpent, and set it upon a pole: and it shall come to pass, that every one that is bitten, when he looketh upon it, shall live.” — Numbers 21:8 Peshat (Literal): The Israelites were bitten by serpents as judgment for their murmuring. Yahweh instructed Moses to make a bronze serpent and lift it on a pole. Anyone who looked at it would be healed. Remez (Hint): Why a serpent? Why not a lamb or a dove? The hint is startling: the symbol of the curse became the in- strument of healing. This whispers of something greater—One who would become a curse to remove the curse. Drash (Teaching): Yahshua Himself provides the interpre- tation: “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up: that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life” (John 3:14- 15). The Galatians letter adds, “Messiah hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us” (Gala- tians 3:13). The serpent on the pole was a prophetic picture of Yahshua on the cross—bearing the image of sin while being sinless, lifted up so that all who look to Him might live. Sod (Secret): The serpent did not become righteous—it re- mained bronze, a symbol of judgment. But by being lifted up, it became the means of salvation. This is the mystery of the cross: Yahshua did not become sinful in nature, but He bore the penalty of sin in appearance. When we look to Him—not to our works, not to our righteousness, not to our efforts—we are healed. The secret is that our salvation comes not from removing the serpent (the curse), but from lifting up the One who bore it. We are healed by looking, not by doing. The Word Is a Tree The Word of Yahweh grows in you like a tree. The Peshat is the seed—the beginning, the basic meaning that is planted. The Remez is the root—reaching deeper, drawing nourish- ment from hidden places. The Derash is the trunk—structure, connection, the visible support that holds everything together. The Sod is the fruit—the goal, the result, the life that nour- ishes others. But what happens if you eat the fruit without the seed? You get a hybrid gospel. A GMO truth. A prophetic ministry that produces no holiness. A spiritual insight that fosters rebellion instead of surrender. We are being called to balance. To climb, but with anchor. To soar, but with Scripture. Learning to Discern Why do some people love truth and others resist it? Because only the weaned can receive it. Isaiah 28:9-10 says: “Whom shall He teach knowledge? and whom shall He make to understand doctrine? them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts. For precept must be upon pre- cept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little.” PARDES is not for babies. It is for those who have left the bottle and come to the table. It is for those who hunger for more than a surface gospel. For those who want to eat from the Tree of Life. You cannot eat from the Tree while clinging to the bottle. If I could count the times well meaning people have instruct- ed me “Pastor Vaughn, you go too deep, you need to keep it simple” and suddenly I hear another ancient voice from the Apostle Paul telling me something different, something Bib- lical “Move on past the elementary levels of the gospel, move on past Repentence and water baptism and faith” Yahweh does not feed the mature one big meal. He feeds us precept upon precept, line upon line, here a little, there a little. Why? So that we can live it, not just learn it. So that the upward journey is not just truth in your head—but transforma- tion in your walk. Don’t Replace. Add. Many who find Hebrew Roots or the mysteries of the King- dom make the mistake of throwing away what came before. They reject everything from their former church. They despise the hymns they used to sing. They mock the believers they used to worship with. But on the upward journey, you don’t replace what was good. You build on it. If you came out of Pentecost, don’t leave the Spirit behind. Bring the fire into Torah. If you came out of Baptist roots, don’t leave your prayer life behind. Bring your devotion into understanding. If you came out of Catholicism, don’t throw away your rev- erence. Redirect it toward the true appointed times. This journey is not about replacement. It is about restoration. It is about adding glory to glory, level to level, circle to circle. Come to the Tree This is the invitation of PARDES: Come to the Tree. Eat its fruit. Drink its sap. Let its shadow cover your life. And as you walk in its cycles, you will not just read the Word. You will become it. The layers are waiting. Climb the next ring. Go up. CHAPTER THREE: The Two Trees The Deception of Goodness Satan is not afraid of your goodness. He is afraid of your holiness. The Bible tells us that Satan deceives the whole world (Rev- elation 12:9). That means your neighbors, your coworkers, your relatives—and yes, you and I too, unless we are walking in divine discernment. But here is the part most believers miss: Satan does not deceive most people through evil. He deceives them through goodness. Think about it. If the enemy approached you with obvious wickedness, you would reject it immediately. If he offered you blatant idolatry, you would turn away. If he tempted you with clear-cut sin, your conscience would sound the alarm. So he doesn’t do that. Instead, he offers you goodness— moral goodness, religious goodness, socially acceptable good- ness—that falls short of holiness. The end-time remnant will not be called merely to discern between good and evil. That is too easy. Even unbelievers know that murder is wrong. What the elect must now learn is how to discern between good and holy. 1. Goodness is feeding the poor. Holiness is obeying the Sabbath. 2. Goodness is donating to charity. Holiness is submitting to Torah. 3. Goodness is morality. Holiness is consecration. 4. Goodness is what man approves. Holiness is what Yahweh commands. We are being called not to be good, but to be set apart. Two Trees: One Garden In the Garden of Eden, Yahweh planted two trees at the cen- ter: the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. These two trees represent two spiritual paths, two mindsets, two approaches to relationship with Yahweh, and ultimately— two gospels. And here is the frightening truth: they look exactly alike. Both trees were in the midst of the garden. Both were desir- able. Both offered something valuable. The difference was not in appearance—it was in origin, authority, and outcome. The Tree of Life offers holiness—obedience leading to inti- macy with Yahweh. The Tree of Knowledge offers religion—the appearance of wisdom without the substance of obedience. Both trees speak Scripture. Both trees claim truth. Both trees promote righteousness. But one leads to eternal life, and the other leads to death dressed in religious clothing. From these two trees flow two churches, two spirits, and two destinations. The Nature of Each Tree The Tree of Life is simple. It says: “Trust Yahweh. Obey His commands. Walk in His ways. Do not rely on your own understanding.” It requires faith. It requires surrender. It requires the admis- sion that we do not know better than our Creator. It produces life, peace, and intimacy. The Tree of Knowledge is complex. It says: “Decide for yourself what is good and what is evil. Use your reason. Trust your heart. You can become like Elohim.” It appeals to independence. It flatters the intellect. It prom- ises enlightenment. And it produces death—slow, deceptive, spiritual death that looks like life until the end. The tragedy of Eden was not that Eve chose something obviously evil. The tragedy was that she chose something that looked good—”pleasant to the eyes,” “good for food,” “desir- able to make one wise”—but was forbidden. This is the pattern of every false gospel: it looks good, feels good, and sounds good—but it is not from Yahweh. Cain and Abel: The Twin Spirits The first picture of these two trees plays out in Genesis 4, in the very first generation after Eden. Cain and Abel both brought offerings to Yahweh. Both wor- shipped. Both approached the altar. Both were sincere. But one was accepted, and the other was not. Why? The text tells us: “YAHWEH had respect unto Abel and to his offering: but unto Cain and to his offering He had not re- spect” (Genesis 4:4-5). Abel brought a firstborn lamb from his flock—a blood sacri- fice, the kind that would later be codified in Torah. Cain brought fruit from the ground—the work of his hands, the produce of his effort. Both offerings required labor. Both represented worship. But only one was what Yahweh had instructed. Cain brought what seemed good to him. Abel brought what Yahweh had commanded. Cain brought religious innovation. Abel brought obedient worship. And the church today is filled with Cain’s offering—sincere, beautiful, impressive—and completely outside of Yahweh’s will. The Tree of Knowledge will lead you to the altar. The Tree of Life will lead you to obedience. Ishmael and Isaac: The Flesh and the Promise The pattern repeats in Genesis 16-21. Abraham and Sarah were promised a son. But years passed, and the promise remained unfulfilled. So Sarah offered her handmaid Hagar to Abraham, and Ishmael was born. Ishmael was Abraham’s son. He was loved. He was circum- cised. He was part of the family. But he was not the son of promise—he was the son of human effort, born from a fleshly attempt to fulfill Yahweh’s word through man’s methods. Isaac came later—born miraculously, according to promise, in Yahweh’s timing. Ishmael represents the Tree of Knowledge: trying to obtain Yahweh’s blessings through human strategy. Good intentions. Sincere effort. Wrong tree. Isaac represents the Tree of Life: waiting for Yahweh to fulfill His word in His way. Trusting the promise. Resting in faith. The church today is filled with Ishmaels: believers trying to manufacture what only Yahweh can birth. Religious programs substitute for spiritual power. Marketing replaces anointing. Organizational growth replaces genuine revival. But the Bride of Messiah is not born of the flesh. She is born of promise. Esau and Jacob: The Profane and the Chosen The pattern continues in Genesis 25-27. Esau and Jacob were twins—born from the same womb, raised in the same household, heirs to the same blessing. But they had opposite hearts. Esau was a skillful hunter, a man of the field, loved by his father for his wild game. Jacob was a quiet man, dwelling in tents, loved by his mother. When Esau came in hungry from the field, he sold his birth- right to Jacob for a bowl of lentils. The text says he “despised his birthright” (Genesis 25:34). Later, Jacob received the blessing of the firstborn through deception—but Hebrews 12:16-17 places the blame on Esau, calling him a “profane person” who sold his inheritance for a single meal. Esau represents the Tree of Knowledge: valuing the im- mediate over the eternal, trading spiritual inheritance for temporary satisfaction. He saw. He wanted. He took. And he lost everything. Jacob (later Israel) represents the Tree of Life: valuing the blessing, pursuing the covenant, refusing to let go until he received what Yahweh promised. The modern church is full of Esaus: believers who trade their spiritual inheritance for comfort, convenience, and cul- tural acceptance. They profane the holy. They treat the sacred as common. They despise the birthright of Torah-obedience because it costs too much. But there is a remnant of Jacobs—those who will wrestle through the night, who will not let go of Yahweh until they are blessed, who value the covenant more than their comfort. The Anti-Tree The word “antichrist” is often misunderstood. “Anti” does not primarily mean “against.” In Greek, it means “in place of.” The Tree of Knowledge is not atheism. It is not open Satan- ism. It is anti-truth—truth’s counterfeit, truth’s replacement. It is religious. It is moral. It is beautiful. It quotes Scripture. It builds hospitals. It feeds the poor. And it is deadly. • It is the gospel that says, “God is love,” but denies that love means correction. • It is the Messiah who saves, but never sanctifies. • It is the Spirit who inspires, but never convicts. • It is the church that celebrates grace, but calls obedience “legalism.” • It is the Antichrist in ecclesiastical clothing. GMO Gospel: Grace Without Holiness In agriculture, a GMO is a genetically modified organism. It looks like real food, but it has been altered at the genetic level. It often lacks the ability to reproduce naturally or to nourish properly. In the church, GMO gospel is a mixture of truth and error. It is part law, part liberty. It is part obedience, part lawlessness. It is a mutated seed that cannot bring forth genuine transfor- mation. GMO gospel says: “The Sabbath was for the Jews. It’s optional now.” “Holiness is legalism. Just believe.” “He did it all, so you don’t have to do anything.” “The law was nailed to the cross.” But the seed of the Tree of Life is pure. It is unaltered. It is rooted in Torah, anointed by Spirit, and bears the fruit of righ- teousness. The true gospel does not abolish the standard—it writes it on our hearts (Jeremiah 31:33). It does not remove the com- mandments—it empowers us to keep them. It does not excuse sin—it delivers us from it. How to Identify the Trees How do you know which tree you are eating from? The fruit tells the truth. Signs of the Tree of Knowledge: It makes room for rebellion. It mocks obedience. It changes Yahweh’s calendar. It produces pride in knowledge without transformation in character. It emphasizes what you don’t have to do. Signs of the Tree of Life: It calls you to obedience. It honors Yahweh’s appointed times. It produces humility, holiness, and hunger for more truth. It emphasizes what you get to do as a covenant child. It bears fruit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. The deception is subtle. The trees look alike. But the fruit tells the truth. Restoration and Return The upward journey is a journey back—back to the Garden, back to the Tree of Life. You do not need to replace what you have learned. You need to restore what has been lost. As Yahweh restores His people, He is also restoring the ancient paths. Isaiah 58:12 says: “And they that shall be of thee shall build the old waste plac- es: thou shalt raise up the foundations of many generations; and thou shalt be called, The Repairer of the Breach, The Restorer of the Streets to Dwell In.” We are returning to the Tree. But this time, we are not eating the fruit of rebellion. We are becoming the fruit of righteous- ness. We are the trees planted by rivers of living water (Psalm 1). We are rooted in holiness. We are branches in the true vine. And the axe is already laid at the root of every tree that refus- es to bear fruit (Matthew 3:10). The Choice The tree you eat from will determine your destiny. Adam and Eve stood before two trees and made a choice. Every generation since has faced the same decision. And now it is your turn. If your gospel makes room for rebellion, it is the wrong tree. If your preacher mocks obedience, it is the wrong tree. If your church rejects Torah, it is the wrong tree. But if the Word convicts, and the Spirit empowers, and the fruit is holiness—that is the Tree of Life. Come to the Tree. Eat and live. Go up. CONCLUSION: Back to the Garden The Journey Comes Full Circle This upward journey began in the garden, where man was given access to the Tree of Life, and it ends in the same place: back to the tree, back to the presence, back to perfection. The journey goes upward, but the destination is Eden re- stored. In the beginning, Adam and Eve walked with Yahweh in the cool of the day. They had unbroken fellowship, unhindered access, and unlimited life. The Tree of Life stood in the midst of the garden, available, offered, permitted. But they chose the other tree. And the way to the Tree of Life was blocked. Cherubim with flaming swords guarded the entrance. Hu- manity was driven out. And for thousands of years, we have wandered east of Eden, longing to return. But now the way is open again. Yahshua—the Pattern Son, the Second Adam, the Gate Him- self—has reopened the path. Through His death and resurrec- tion, He has defeated the cherubim’s sword. He has passed through the veil. He has entered the Most Holy Place. And He invites us to follow. The Restoration of All Things Acts 3:21 speaks of the “restoration of all things, which Yah- weh hath spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began.” We are living in the season of restoration. The Torah is being restored—not as a burden, but as a de- light. The feasts are being restored—not as Jewish customs, but as prophetic appointments. The Sabbath is being restored—not as legalism, but as a sign of covenant. The identity of Israel is being restored—as both houses are being reunited, and the scattered tribes are being called home. The name of YAHWEH is being restored—spoken again after centuries of silence. The true gospel is being restored—grace and obedience in harmony, faith and works walking together. And the Bride is being prepared. We Are Not “New Testament Christians” The term “New Testament Christian” implies a break—as if we belong to a different book, a different covenant, a different faith than those who walked with Moses and David and Eli- jah. But we are not a new religion. We are the continuation of an ancient one. We are not “New Testament Christians.” We are Whole Word Believers. We do not pit the New against the Old. We do not pit grace against law. We read the whole scroll, from Genesis to Reve- lation, as one unified testimony of Yahweh’s redemptive plan. The “New Covenant” is not a replacement covenant. It is the Torah written on our hearts (Jeremiah 31:33). It is the same law—now internal instead of external. It is the same com- mands—now empowered by the Spirit instead of engraved on stone. We are heirs of Abraham, children of promise, branches grafted back into the olive tree whose root is Israel and the Abrahamic Covenant, the very root that we ran away from when we found roman hybridized Christianity. The Word-Bride Is Rising Across the world, something is stirring. In every nation, in every tongue, among every people—a remnant is awakening. They are leaving Babylon. They are returning to the ancient paths. They are picking up the Torah and finding it to be a lamp unto their feet. They are keeping the Sabbath and dis- covering rest. They are celebrating Passover and encountering the Lamb. They are studying the Hebrew roots and finding the tree they were grafted into. This is not a fad. This is not a movement. This is the Spirit of Yahweh calling His Bride to prepare. The Bridegroom is coming. And the Bride who meets Him will be dressed in fine linen, clean and white. Revelation 19:8 tells us what that linen represents: “the righteous acts of the saints.” Not faith alone. Not grace alone. But righteous acts—the works that prove faith is alive (James 2:17). The Bride will be a Torah-keeping, Sabbath-honoring, feast-observing, Spirit-filled people who have overcome the world, the flesh, and the lies of the enemy. There is a rea- son that the Overcomers are numbered as 144,000. They are known by Yahweh before the foundations of the world. She will be a Whole Word Bride. The Spiral Reaches Its Peak The upward journey does not end in this book. It does not end in this lifetime. It ends when the spiral reaches its apex— when the age of man gives way to the age of rest, when the Sabbath of history dawns, when Yahshua sets His feet on the Mount of Olives and takes His throne. Until then, we climb. We circle back through the same truths, each time seeing them from a higher vantage point. We walk through the same feasts, each year understanding them more deeply. We read the same Scriptures, and the Spirit shows us new facets we never saw before. This is the upward journey: not a destination, but a direc- tion. Not a point of arrival, but a path of ascent. The Invitation You have read this book. You have been introduced to the Hebrew mindset, the four layers of PARDES, and the two trees that divide all of religion. But knowledge is not transformation. The question now is: will you climb? Will you begin keeping the Sabbath, even if your family does not understand? Will you celebrate the feasts, even if your church calls them “Jewish”? Will you read the Scriptures through Hebrew eyes, even if your pastor disagrees? Will you return to the Tree of Life, even if it costs you ev- erything? The remnant is small. The path is narrow. The climb is steep. But the reward is beyond measure. At the top of the spiral is the Garden restored. At the peak of the staircase is the Tree of Life. At the end of the journey is the Presence—the unbroken, unhindered, unlimited fellowship with the Father that Adam forfeited and Yahshua repurchased. The next circle is calling. Do not go forward. Go higher. Go up. Study Questions Introduction: The Journey Begins 1. What does it mean that this journey is “upward” rather than “forward”? How does this shape your understand- ing of spiritual growth? 2. The author warns that this journey will cost you some- thing. What might it cost you specifically? Are you willing to pay that price? 3. What is the difference between a “New Testament Christian” and a “Whole Word Believer”? Chapter One: How to Interpret the Bible 1. How does linear (Western) thinking differ from cyclical (Hebrew) thinking? Give an example of each from your own experience. 2. Why is the division between the “Old” and “New” Testaments problematic? What might be a better way to understand the relationship between these sections of Scripture? 3. Explain the metaphor of the Bible as a diamond. How does this change the way you approach Scripture study? 4. The author identifies two root systems: Jerusalem and Rome. What are the characteristics of each? Which tree has your faith tradition been rooted in? 5. Why is it important to understand the Hebrew cultural context of the Bible? Give an example of how cultural context changes the meaning of a passage. Chapter Two: The Hebrew Layers – PARDES 1. Define each level of PARDES: Peshat, Remez, Derash, and Sod. 2. What is the “Rule of Advancement” and why is it im- portant for preventing false doctrine? 3. Apply the PARDES method to Genesis 22 (the binding of Isaac). What do you discover at each level? 4. What is the danger of pursuing Sod-level revelation without being grounded in Peshat? 5. The author says, “You cannot eat from the Tree while clinging to the bottle.” What does this mean, and how does it apply to your spiritual growth? Chapter Three: The Two Trees 1. What is the difference between “good” and “holy”? Why does Satan prefer to deceive through goodness rather than obvious evil? 2. Explain how Cain and Abel, Ishmael and Isaac, and Esau and Jacob all illustrate the two-tree principle. 3. What is “GMO gospel” and what are its characteristics? 4. How can you tell which tree your church or ministry is rooted in? Be specific about the “fruit” that reveals the root. 5. The author says the journey is not about replacement but restoration. What aspects of your previous faith ex- perience should you keep as you climb higher? Conclusion: Back to the Garden 1. What does it mean that the journey is “back to the Gar- den”? How does this affect your view of the end times? 2. The author describes a “Whole Word Bride.” What are her characteristics? 3. What specific steps will you take this week to apply what you have learned in this book? 4. Who in your life might benefit from this teaching? How will you share it with them? 5. Write a personal commitment statement describing how you will continue the upward journey. About the Author Rev. John S. Vaughn is the Founding Apostolic Overseer of First Harvest Ministries International (FHMI), with nearly 40 years in ministry. Ordained at age 14, he leads congregations throughout North America and internationally. Pastor Vaughn operates teaching platforms at www.HisComingKingdom.com and www.TheTruthTv.tv, and has authored over 50 books on top- ics including biblical chronology, covenant theology, and the restoration of Hebrew roots. Shane and First Lady Karen Vaughn operate from the Gulf Coast of Mississippi, where they continue to call the remnant upward into the fullness of the Father’s purpose. For more information, visit: • www.FirstHarvestChurch.org • www.HisComingKingdom.com The next circle is calling. Go up.

Summary

This book introduces FHMI’s framework for Hebraic biblical interpretation, explaining the upward journey from surface reading into layered understanding through PARDES. It contrasts Western linear interpretation with Hebrew cyclical thought and calls believers to return to the ancient paths of Torah, Sabbath, Feasts, sacred identity, and whole-Bible faith. The work frames spiritual growth as a return to the Tree of Life and a preparation of the Whole Word Bride for the restoration of all things.

Core doctrine

Restoration of All Thing