May 13, 2026
The Twin Flames: Flame 3 — Islam, Christianity's Twin Flame

Two Towers
On September 11, 2001, two towers fell.
They called them the Twin Towers. Two identical structures, rising side by side from the same foundation, reaching toward the heavens. And when they collapsed, they collapsed together — because twin flames always consume each other.
Every year since, on the anniversary of their fall, two beams of light shoot from the ground where they once stood — the Tribute in Light — piercing the night sky and reaching upward into nothing.
Two beams of light. Reaching to heaven. Just like Babel.
Come, let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven; and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth. — Genesis 11:4
Babel was not about bricks. Babel was about destination. Mankind wanted to reach heaven on its own terms — by its own design, through its own construction. And AO came down and scattered them.
Now look at what stands in the place where the Twin Towers fell: One World Trade Center. One tower where two used to be. The synthesis.
Two flames. One foundation. One destination. And eventually — one tower.
This is not a coincidence. It is a sign.
One Match, Two Flames
In Part 1, we established that AO never commanded blood sacrifice. Leviticus was inserted into the Torah by a fabricated tribe — Levi — to install a sacrificial system that turned the Most High God into a deity indistinguishable from Baal. Every pagan god demands blood. AO does not:
For I spoke not unto your fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning burnt offerings or sacrifices. — Jeremiah 7:22
In Part 2, we demonstrated that Christianity is the second flame — a religion built on top of the first flame's false premise. Levi installed the demand for blood. Then Judah offered a man — JC — as the "ultimate sacrifice" to satisfy that demand. And to seal the deception, Paul declared the Torah obsolete. The tree of life became the ministry of death. The commandments became a curse. And two billion people were told to stop keeping the very thing AO says gives them life.
But the second flame is not alone.
There is a reason they are called twin flames.
The Concept
The concept of twin flames in pop culture describes one soul incarnated into two bodies — two halves that always crave to be reunited. They mirror each other. They obsess over each other. They collide. They destroy. And they burn from the same source.
Christianity and Islam are theological twin flames. They emerged from the same corrupted source — Second Temple Judaism. They were both lit by the same match — Levi's fabricated blood sacrifice system. They mirror each other's structure. They have warred with each other for centuries. And they offer the same false destination: you are going to heaven.
Levi is not a flame. Levi is the match. And from that single spark, two fires erupted — one in the West, one in the East — and between them they have burned the entire earth.
Flame 1: The Blood Is Finished
Christianity's answer to the sacrificial system is finality.
It is finished. — John 19:30
JC is presented as the lamb of God — the ultimate, final blood sacrifice. One death to end all deaths. One offering to satisfy every demand. The blood has been shed, the veil is torn, and the altar is closed forever. No more lambs, no more bulls, no more goats. The blood is done.
And the reward? Heaven. You are going to heaven. Cover yourself in the blood, believe in the sacrifice, and your soul ascends to paradise when you die. That is the promise. That is the product. That is what two billion people have been sold.
Drink my blood. — Matthew 26:28
Christianity took the sacrificial system AO never commanded, declared it fulfilled in a single man, and told Israel to drink the blood — the one thing the Torah forbids above all else (Genesis 9:4, Deuteronomy 12:16, Deuteronomy 12:23–24).
The sacrifice is finished. Now you are going to heaven.
Flame 2: The Blood Continues
Islam's answer to the sacrificial system is perpetuation.
Every year, during Eid al-Adha — the Feast of Sacrifice — close to fifty million animals are slaughtered across the Muslim world. Sheep, goats, cattle, camels — their blood poured out in commemoration of Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son. A thought that would never enter the heart of the Most High according to Jeremiah 7:31.
The sacrifice is not finished. The blood keeps flowing. The knives keep cutting. The altars are never closed.
And the reward? Heaven. You are going to heaven. Submit to Allah, follow the pillars, observe the fast, and your soul ascends to Jannah when you die. That is the promise. That is the product. That is what nearly two billion people have been sold.
Two religions. Two answers to the same question. And both answers flow from the same false premise: that AO commanded blood sacrifice in the first place.
Christianity says: the blood is done — one sacrifice, once and for all.
Islam says: the blood continues — sacrifice every year, without end.
Neither says what AO actually said:
I did not command it. — Jeremiah 7:22
The Same Foundation
Look at how perfectly the twin flames mirror each other.
Both claim Abraham as their father. Christianity through Isaac. Islam through Ishmael. Two sons — one father. Twin flames.
Both accept the premise that AO demanded Abraham sacrifice his son. Christianity says it was Isaac on Moriah. Islam says it was Ishmael at Mina. The details differ, but the theology is identical: God commands blood sacrifice, and obedience means willingness to shed it.
But as mentioned earlier, AO says the thought of sacrificing children never entered His heart:
And they have built the high places of Tophet, which is in the valley of the son of Hinnom, to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire; which I commanded not, neither came it into My heart. — Jeremiah 7:31
Both religions build their identity on a God who demands the blood of sons. Both are wrong.
And we know this story is fabricated because the Book of Jasher tells us what actually happened. Isaac was not a child. He was thirty-seven years old. And the whole event was triggered by his own words:
41 And when Isaac was thirty-seven years old, Ishmael his brother was going about with him in the tent.
42 And Ishmael boasted of himself to Isaac, saying: "I was thirteen years old when AO spoke to my father to circumcise us, and I did according to the Word of AO which he spoke to my father, and I gave my soul unto AO, and I did not transgress his word which he commanded my father."
43 And Isaac answered Ishmael, saying: "Why do you boast to me about this, about a little bit of your flesh which you did take from your body, concerning which AO commanded you?"
44 "As AO lives, the Elohiym of my father Abraham, if AO should say unto my father: 'Take now your son Isaac and bring him up an offering before me,' I would not refrain but I would joyfully accede to it."
45 And AO heard the word that Isaac spoke to Ishmael, and it seemed good in the sight of AO, and he thought to try Abraham in this matter. — Jasher 22:41–45
Isaac told Ishmael he would joyfully give his life if AO asked. And AO heard it and decided to test Abraham. It was Isaac's own words that set the whole thing in motion.
And Ishmael knew:
And Ishmael said to Eleazar: "Now my father Abraham is going with Isaac to bring him up for an ascending smoke offering to AO, as He commanded him." — Jasher 23:22
Ishmael knew. Eleazar knew. Isaac knew. So explain these verses in Genesis:
7 And Isaac spake unto Abraham his father, and said, "My father:" and he said, "Here am I, my son." And he said, "Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?"
8 And Abraham said, "My son, God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering:" so they went both of them together. — Genesis 22:7–8
A thirty-seven-year-old man who just told his brother he would joyfully offer himself is now asking where is the lamb? as if he does not know? Genesis rewrites Isaac as a confused child being led unknowingly to slaughter — because the story only works as a foundation for blood sacrifice theology if the son is an innocent victim, not a willing participant.
And worse — "God will provide himself a lamb." That single line plants the seed for the entire theology. The lamb without blemish. The lamb of God. The Passover lamb that takes away sin. Every blood sacrifice doctrine in Christianity traces back to this one fabricated verse in Genesis, placed in Abraham's mouth to lay the foundation for a savior who had not yet been invented.
Both Islam and Christianity accept a holy book authored after the Torah — the New Testament and the Quran — and both claim their book supersedes what came before. Christianity says the "old covenant" is fulfilled and replaced. Islam says the Torah was corrupted and the Quran is the final revelation.
Both provide a mechanism to bypass the Torah entirely. Christianity calls it grace. Islam calls it submission. Both lead to the same place — away from the commandments, the statutes, and the judgments that AO says are life (Deuteronomy 30:15–16).
And both promise the same destination: heaven.
Not the restoration of Israel. Not the return to the land. Not David raised as king and shepherd. Not the rebuilding of the temple. Not the regathering of the twelve tribes. Christianity claims these prophecies were already fulfilled spiritually through JC. Islam claims the book that contains them was corrupted. Both routes lead to the same place — neither religion will be watching when the real fulfillment comes.
Just: you're going to heaven. All dogs go to heaven.
The Destination AO Never Promised
Search the Torah from Genesis to Deuteronomy. Find the verse where AO promises Israel that they will go to heaven when they die.
You will not find it. Because it does not exist.
AO's promises are earthly. They are physical. They are national. He promises land — not clouds. He promises a kingdom — not an afterlife. He promises that David will sit on the throne and shepherd Israel — not that disembodied souls will float upward into a paradise beyond the sky.
And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto Jacob My servant, wherein your fathers have dwelt; and they shall dwell therein, even they, and their children, and their children's children for ever: and My servant David shall be their prince for ever. — Ezekiel 37:25
For, lo, the days come, saith AO, that I will bring again the captivity of My people Israel and Judah, saith AO: and I will cause them to return to the land that I gave to their fathers, and they shall possess it. — Jeremiah 30:3
The Hebrew word for "land" in this verse is Eres — H776. When my wife was pregnant with our second son, AO gave me the name. I heard "Ares" — the Greek god of war — and convinced myself it was because there was a war for my soul going on while he was inside my wife's stomach. But AO commands us to never speak the name of false gods (Exodus 23:13). He would never give me the name of a Greek idol for my son. He meets you where you are at — and I was still swimming in the toilet.
It was not until years later, studying Jeremiah 30:3, that the verse bothered me. What land? I was still in the New Testament framework — we are not going back to the land, we are going to heaven, and then earth will be recreated. So "land" must mean the whole earth. So I went to Blue Letter Bible to look up the Hebrew word for "land."
H776 — Eres.
AO did not name my son after a war. He named him after His promise to Israel. HalleluAO.
AO is bringing His people back to the earth. David will reign on the earth. The temple will stand on the earth. The Torah will be kept on the earth.
But both flames point upward. Away from the land. Away from the Torah. Away from the throne. Away from everything AO actually promised. They point toward heaven — like two beams of light rising from the ruins of two towers that have already fallen.
Like Babel. Always like Babel.
Come, let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven. — Genesis 11:4
The builders of Babel wanted to reach God on their own terms. AO scattered them. Christianity and Islam are the same ambition in religious form — two towers of theology reaching upward, built on a foundation AO never laid, promising a destination AO never offered.
Twin Flames Destroy Each Other
The defining characteristic of twin flames is not love. It is destruction.
For as long as both have existed, Christianity and Islam have been at war. The Crusades. The Ottoman conquest of Constantinople. The Reconquista. The fall of Jerusalem. The siege of Vienna. Colonialism. And now — the War on Terror, September 11, and the endless conflict that reshapes the world every generation.
Two flames consuming each other. Exactly as twin flames do.
And when the Twin Towers fell — attacked by one flame, symbols of the other — the world watched two structures that shared the same foundation collapse into dust. What rose in their place? One World Trade Center. One tower. The synthesis.
The Hegelian dialectic does not end with two. It ends with one. Thesis. Antithesis. Synthesis. Judaism provided the thesis — the false foundation of a fabricated priesthood and a blood sacrifice AO never commanded. Christianity and Islam are the antitheses — two competing answers to the same false question. And the synthesis is what comes after both flames burn out: a single system, a single tower, a single world order that replaces them both.
But AO has His own plan. And it does not involve towers.
The Tabernacle That Fell
While mankind builds towers reaching up to heaven, AO is rebuilding something that comes down to earth:
In that day will I raise up the tabernacle of David that is fallen, and close up the breaches thereof; and I will raise up his ruins, and I will build it as in the days of old. — Amos 9:11
The tabernacle does not reach upward. It comes down. It dwells among the people. The presence of AO does not live in the sky — it lives in the midst of Israel.
Christianity and Islam both build towers to heaven. AO builds a tabernacle on earth. They point up. He comes down. They promise escape. He promises restoration.
The tabernacle of David has fallen. The throne is empty. The priesthood is scattered. The children of Israel serve other gods which neither they nor their fathers have known (Deuteronomy 28:64) — Christianity and Islam chief among them.
But AO will raise up what has fallen. Not a tower. Not a beam of light. Not a cathedral or a mosque or a temple built by men.
A tabernacle. David's tabernacle. Rebuilt as in the days of old.
And when it rises, both flames will be extinguished — because the match that lit them was never from AO.
Never Forget
They say "never forget." Two beams of light reach toward heaven every September 11, and the world looks up and remembers.
But what are they remembering? Two towers built on the same foundation, reaching for the same destination, destroyed by the collision of two flames that burned from the same source.
Christianity and Islam are the twin flames of the same deception. One says the blood is finished. The other says keep it flowing. But the Most High says He never commanded it.
One says heaven awaits after death. The other says heaven awaits after death. But AO promised a kingdom on earth — ruled by David, governed by Torah, inhabited by the children of Israel regathered from the four corners of the earth.
Two towers fell. One tower rose. And two beams of light still reach toward heaven — because mankind has never stopped building Babel.
But the tabernacle of David is not a tower. It does not reach up. It is raised up — by the hand of AO alone. And when it stands again, the twin flames will go out, the towers will come down, and the children of Israel will finally come home.
For thus said AO: David shall never lack a man to sit upon the throne of the house of Israel. — Jeremiah 33:17
Afterward shall the children of Israel return, and seek AO their God, and David their king; and shall fear AO and His goodness in the latter days. — Hosea 3:5
The latter days are here.
This is Part 4 of the True Lineage of the Messiah series. Read Part 1: Ephraim Is My Helmet | Flame 1: The Priests of Baal | Flame 2: Drink My Blood | 9-11: The Occult's Favorite Number
Start with Welcome to the Torah of AO or read the Resurrection of King David for the Scriptural proof that David is the true Messiah.
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