The Evolved Podcast

The Great Story of Survival: The Genesis Creation Narrative Re-Examined

Manhattan Prophet Season 1 Episode 8

What if everything we thought we knew about the story of Genesis was a misunderstanding? Not just a minor misinterpretation, but a fundamental misreading of an ancient survivor's account?

Aaron Scott's tenth episode shatters conventional understanding of Biblical creation stories by exploring a revolutionary perspective—Genesis isn't describing the birth of our world, but its rebirth after catastrophe. Drawing from ancient pictographic languages like Naga and examining geological evidence, this episode reveals how "days of creation" might actually document Earth's recovery stages after a devastating planetary shift 11,500 years ago.

We journey through scientific evidence suggesting Earth's crust periodically slips across its molten interior, causing global cataclysms that reset civilization. The evidence is startling: mammoths frozen mid-stride with food still in their mouths, ancient seaports now sitting at 12,500 feet elevation, coral reefs in Arctic regions, and approximately 8,000 similar flood myths worldwide. Could Adam and Eve be survivors rather than first humans? Might the serpent represent not temptation but rising oceans? Does the "tree of life" symbolize a lost continent?

This perspective transforms Genesis from religious allegory to historical warning. By examining the intersection of ancient texts, geological records, and archaeological discoveries, we glimpse a forgotten chapter of human history—one where advanced civilizations may have risen and fallen multiple times as Earth underwent dramatic shifts. The Manhattan Prophet suggests these aren't just stories but encoded memories preserved by ancestors who survived when the world literally turned upside down.

Follow this podcast for weekly insights that challenge conventional wisdom and expand your consciousness. If these revelations resonate with you, share this episode with others seeking deeper understanding of our collective past. How might recognizing these patterns change how we prepare for our future?

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Speaker 1:

Hello everyone and welcome to the 10th episode of the Manhattan Prophet podcast. I am the Manhattan Prophet, as a reminder, so that nothing is lost in translation. I'm here to ensure that all knowledge I give you finds meaning in a practical place in your everyday lives. It's only through properly digesting knowledge that we see things clearly enough to break old patterns of behavior and begin a new path forward to an evolved state of consciousness. Of all the stories, parables, fairy tales that run rampant throughout the Bible, the story of Genesis is the hardest for me to wrap my head around. Not hard in the sense that I cannot understand it, but hard to reconcile the story against the laws of the physical universe. In case you are not familiar with the story of Genesis, it goes something like this the universe was created by God in six days. On the first day, he created light and darkness. Second day, sky and water. Third day, land, seas and vegetation. On day four, the sun, the moon and the stars. On day five, sea creatures and birds. Day six, land, animals and humans. On day seven, god rests.

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The Big Bang Theory, in contrast, which is the leading scientific explanation for how the universe began, is supported by multiple lines of evidence from astronomy, physics and cosmology. According to physics, the Big Bang theory about 13.8 billion years ago the universe was born from a singularity, a point of infinite density and temperature where space and time as we know them didn't exist. This wasn't an explosion in space. It was the birth of space itself. Time began, the laws of physics began, expansion began. The main pieces of evidence supporting the Big Bang theory are the expansion of the universe, called redshift. It means that distant galaxies are moving away from us, and the farther away they are, the faster they're moving. This suggests that the universe is expanding, implying it was once compacted into a single point. We have cosmic microwave background radiation. That's measurable. What this is is faint, uniform microwave radiation that fills the universe. It's basically the afterglow of the Big Bang. It's the residual heat from the early, early universe. We also have the abundance of light elements. This means that the early universe was hot enough for nuclear reactions to occur, forming light elements like hydrogen helium and small amounts of lithium. Effectively, this matters because the Big Bang model accurately predicts the observed ratios of these elements across the universe. Lastly, we have Einstein's general theory of relativity, and what that says basically is that space and time are connected and can expand or contract. It matters because the mathematics of relativity, when applied to the universe, predict expansion from a singular origin which matches the Big Bang theory predictions Taking a step back.

Speaker 1:

The story of Genesis, when compared to the Big Bang theory, is so dissimilar that it's almost hard to believe they're covering the same topic. Genesis is simply not scientifically feasible. For one thing, genesis implies the Earth and all life were created in six days, around 6,000 to 10,000 years ago. Science, on the other hand, says that the Earth is 4.54 billion years old and that modern humans have existed for at least 200,000 years. Lastly, that civilization emerged around 10,000 years ago, not at the same time as Earth itself.

Speaker 1:

The next reason that it isn't scientifically feasible is that the creation order conflicts with natural laws. Conflicts with natural laws. So Genesis states that plants came before the sun, that earth came before the stars and that birds and fish were created before land animals. Science says, however, that the sun was formed before earth and, because plants require sunlight, that they couldn't predate the sun's existence. Additionally, that birds evolved from land-based animals. Additionally, that birds evolved from land-based animals, and also fossil records and DNA events show a slow-branching tree of life, not sudden creation, as the story of Genesis depicts.

Speaker 1:

What's interesting, however, is that people of faith, religious followers, all too often commonly ascribe events that define natural laws to be those most closely aligned with God. The source, however you want to call it. This, in my opinion, is a symptom of the simplified, illusory understanding we have all been taught since childhood of equating religious truth with things that cannot be described and further need not be justified Stories like wine from water talking to burning bushes, etc. Interestingly, god or the source, the universe, shows its majesty through the laws of the universe, not pixie dust. As we see, by taking the story of Genesis for face value, we are left with irreconcilable issues. However, if we re-examine the story from a different vantage point, a new perspective is gained, one that presents a far more interesting and compelling account of the story from the account of a survivor. Hear me out.

Speaker 1:

The Bible begins with in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth, but the version we're told is a translation of a translation. Scholars recognize that the story of Genesis contains multiple sources or versions woven together. This is well documented. We have, for example, four main source traditions in Genesis. We have the Yahwist, which uses Yahweh for the Lord's name for God. This is an earthly for the Lord's name for God. This is an earthly, vivid, storytelling-like tradition. Then we have the Elohist, which uses the word Elohim for God. In this tradition there is a heightened focus on morality and moral themes. Then we have the priestly version. Here we see a structured ritual focus. This is seen in the seven-day creation. Here we see a structured ritual focus. This is seen in the seven-day creation, then the redactor tradition, where the editor combined all the traditions. This is why, for example, that there are two creation stories the seven-day creation and the Garden of Eden story. So while there's one book of Genesis, it contains multiple layers or versions of the same events, reflecting different traditions or theological emphases.

Speaker 1:

This re-examination, this repurposing, this re-understanding, is not that kind of different and it's based on a re-translation from what has been argued to be the original source, an ancient pictographic language called Naga, a cousin of early Mayan, egyptian and even Polynesian scripts. Let's start there, in the beginning. 4.5 billion years ago, our Earth formed, nestled in the cosmic design. But the genesis that's whispered to us from this alternative translation speaks not only of creation but recreation, of cataclysm and rebirth. One event stands out A great catastrophe 11,500 years ago, a violent Earth shift, a planetary upheaval, a reset, and it's from this moment that our regenesis begins.

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The earth was drowned in turbulent oceans, skies were black, with storms, and then sunlight returned. Day and night resumed their rhythm. But the Bible calls it the quote-unquote days of creation. Perhaps they're not creation at all, but stages of recovery. Day one darkness covered the planet after the great inundation, and then light broke through the chaos. Day two skies cleared, the storm evaded, clouds separated from oceans. Day three land re emerged, earth breathed again. Grass, herbs and fruit began to sprout. Day four the sun and moon returned, no longer obscured Seasons, days and years became trackable once more. No longer obscured Seasons, days and years became trackable once more. Day five life in the seas stirred again. Whales, fish, winged creatures. They had survived and began to thrive. Day six beasts returned to the land and mankind survived, not newly made, but preserved, a re-genesis.

Speaker 1:

We often think of Adam and Eve as the first humans, but what if they were the first to remain after a catastrophe? According to this version, adam was a widower. His partner lost during the cataclysm and was left behind a daughter. This daughter grew and Adam said of her she is bone of my bone, flesh, of my flesh. This wasn't poetry, it was genealogy. She became Eve and from them the lineage began again. So what was Eden then? A paradise or a continent?

Speaker 1:

The glyphs that underpin Genesis come from the Naga language, an ancient pictographic system nearly identical to Mayan and possibly older. Let's break down just a few of them. Here we have the tree, which is not a tree but a continent. The tree of life was the motherland. Then we have the serpent, who's not evil but is a representation of water, which were the oceans that surrounded Eden. Fruit, not temptation, but lineage. Eating the fruit meant being descended from the first humans.

Speaker 1:

The rib not a body part, but parentage. Curved lines and glyphs denoted ancestry. We have the cherubim not angels, but foundations, pillars holding up the continent. And the flaming sword not divine judgment, but molten lava, earth, fire. And the most shocking glyph of all the creation glyph A sleeping figure at the top, a woman, then a male in the middle and a female at the bottom. Curved lines connect them. This was not Eve born from Adam's rib. This was Eve born of Adam and a dead woman.

Speaker 1:

The symbols weren't moral lessons, they were geographical, genealogical and geological. We aren't just reading a myth. We're reading a map, a migration, a memory of a lost world. Dr Malika Ray, paleo-civilization scholar, says, and I quote the story of Genesis begins to sound more like a cultural record when viewed through the lens of glyph analysis that alone repositions Eden not as paradise but as prelude.

Speaker 1:

Even this reading is not deceived by a snake. She knows, she sees the signs of impending doom and she warns Adam the knowledge they carry of good and evil isn't forbidden fruit, it's inherited wisdom. She tells him. The oceans will drown all others, but through us, the seed survives. And so they leave, not punished, chosen, they journey to colder lands, they learn to farm, to survive, to wear skins, to raise children. Their legacy is not shame, it is perseverance. They didn't sin, they didn't fall, they fled. Across the world, we find similar stories In Polynesia. Tauroa survives the great flood. In India, vishnu rises from the water. Across the world, we find similar stories In Polynesia. Tauroa survives the Great Flood. In India, vishnu rises from the water and Sumer Utnapishtim builds an ark. In Egypt, osiris dies and is reborn.

Speaker 1:

Different names, same core truth A memory of a lost world, of survivors walking through the fire and flood into a new age. You might ask why revisit Genesis this way. Why sift through myths and translations? Well, because understanding our true past can illuminate our present and protect our future. If these cataclysms are real, they may return. If Earth's crust has shifted before, it can again. And if ancient survivors encoded their story in myth, perhaps it's time we listen. This Genesis isn't just about creation. It's about resilience, about knowledge preserved in symbols and scrolls, about ancestors who survived the end of the world and began again Noah, adam and Eve, vishnu, osiris. At first glance they seem like characters from different worlds, separated by thousands of miles, thousands of years. But what if they weren't? What if they were all eyewitnesses to the same kind of global event? What if these stories were never meant to be myths, but warnings?

Speaker 1:

George Cuvier in 1812, the father of paleontology, peers into the strata of the earth and sees something terrifying Layer after layer of life suddenly destroyed, replaced, destroyed again. This was not slow evolution, he wrote. This was sudden, violent. Others joined him DeLuke, d'alemu, van Buk, they all saw it Earth's surface had shifted rapidly, catastrophically. But their ideas didn't fit the narrative. So the scientific world buried them. But like any beast, the truth doesn't die, it waits.

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Then Frank Hibben, 20th century archaeologist, picks up the scent. What does he find? Well, he finds bones Everywhere, entire species, mammoths, bison, lions, bears, torn apart, frozen mid-stride, their stomachs still full Alaska, florida, new Jersey muck pits packed with twisted remains, like some invisible force swept through and froze time. This wasn't extinction, it was almost like an execution. And it happened fast, so fast the earth didn't have time to blink. Cuvier once demanded find the cause. Well, in 1949, someone did. He didn't look in one discipline, he looked in all of them Stratigraphy, seismology, oceanography, anthropology.

Speaker 1:

And when you piece the data together, line up the carbon dating, fossil layers, myths and magnetic pole data, a chilling picture emerges. The Earth tumbles, not metaphorically but literally. Its crust, a floating shell slides across its molten interior. And the last five times it happened we know when 35,000 years ago in Wisconsin. 29,000 years ago, the Caspian Sea. 18,500 years ago, hudson Bay. 11,500 years ago, sudan Basin and 6,500 years ago, the Arctic Ocean. That last one lines up with Noah's Flood.

Speaker 1:

Imagine Earth as a spinning top. Its crust, about 60 miles thick, rides on a layer of molten rock. Most of the time it's stable, but over thousands of years the ice caps build weight. They don't sit evenly at the poles. They torque the shell. Eventually, the grip breaks. The crust slips In less than 24 hours. The poles move, oceans roar across continents, winds scream at 1,000 miles an hour. It's not just a shift, it's a reset.

Speaker 1:

We revisit historical flood stories the Epic of Gilgamesh, nordic flood myths, hopi legends, each with a day of darkness, a flood and a survivor. What causes the crust to slip? A trigger deep inside Earth. Every few thousand years, neutral matter from the core escapes. It enters the outer molten layer. The result? A literal atomic scale explosion. The Earth's electromagnetic structure collapses, gravity shifts and suddenly the shell is loose. It's not divine wrath, it's planetary inevitability. And like an engine, when it misfires, everything downstream fails.

Speaker 1:

We find the fingerprints of these events across the globe Mammoths flash, frozen in bloom-filled meadows. Seaports in Peru, now at 12,500 feet. A vanished Pacific continent ringed by Easter Island, tahiti and Hawaii. Coral reefs in the Arctic. Global flawed myths, 8,000 of them. Granite boulders resting where glaciers never reached. Egyptian water docks that map a different sky. The earth doesn't whisper, it roars and it leaves receipts.

Speaker 1:

Geological evidence aligns with folklore, sediment layers align with legends. Time and time again, vishnu, osiris, utnapishtim. These weren't just legends, they were survivors, carriers of memory, of warnings. Vishnu, the god who rises from water ten times. Osiris, the man torn apart and resurrected. Noah, the builder of the ark, remembered in Sumer as Utnapishtim.

Speaker 1:

Each story, a puzzle piece from the same disaster. If myth is a language of memory, then maybe myth is the oldest science we have. What if the Bible's origin story is older than we think? Moses trained in Egyptian temples, likely having access to ancient texts written not in Hebrew but in glyphs.

Speaker 1:

The Adam and Eve story we know comes to us through Ezra, a scribe, a priest, an exile, a memory keeper of the Hebrew people. We are taught that Ezra rewrote the Hebrew scriptures from memory after the destruction of Jerusalem in 586 BCE. One phrase he remembered stands out without form and void, but translated literally from the ancient Naga language, this becomes raging inundations and horrendous winds. This is not a metaphor, that's a cataclysm. Ezra's words weren't invention, they were translation filtered through generations of oral tradition, cultural bias and linguistic evolution. And he wasn't just recording a creation myth. He was documenting the survival of a world-ending event. In the original language, naga, the tree was a continent, the serpent was the ocean, the rib meant lineage, not the bone.

Speaker 1:

Adam, a widower, eve, his daughter, the last survivors of a cataclysm. They didn't fall from grace. They fled from fire. Before the last cataclysm, the Amazon was an inland sea. The Gulf of Mexico was dry land. A Pacific supercontinent spanned half the ocean. We were advanced, we were everywhere. We were thriving. Then the earth rolled, oceans surged, continents vanished. The past didn't disappear, it drowned, and the world we know today rose from the wreckage.

Speaker 1:

As you continue listening to the Manhattan Prophet podcast, I'm going to unveil the true nature of the world that exists right under your nose. I'm going to analyze with you, out in the open, the systems at play here and the ways we can grow together and evolve. I'm going to provide you with real-world, conscious ways to touch higher levels of consciousness and understand through truth and knowledge. I want to make this clear I do not own these truths. I do not own this knowledge. I'm simply extracting it and distilling it for you in an accessible form. I ask not that you follow me blindly, but rather that you follow me with your open mind and heart, a following of truth and safety and freedom through this truth. I'm proud of you for taking this next step and trusting me as your guide.

Speaker 1:

Episodes are updated weekly. If you believe and want to change your world for the better and support this evolution of consciousness. Please show me by following and sharing this channel with those you know, with those you love, and leaving a review. If you enjoyed our time today, please donate on BuyMeACoffee. It's linked in the show notes below. Until next week, let's level up and master your universe.