THE FORBIDDEN TRUTH: THE BLACK GODS WHO RULED THE WORLD BEFORE YAHWEH!
What if everything you’ve ever been taught about God was only half the truth?
What if the divine image you were raised to worship, a distant white European figure, was never the original?
What if long before the name Yahweh echoed through temples and churches, there were black gods—divine beings of power, wisdom, and creation—revered by ancient civilizations across Africa, Mesopotamia, and beyond?
Beneath the surface of the Bible, buried in ancient texts, hidden in temple walls, and museum cases, lies a truth too dangerous for empires to allow.

A truth that connects you to gods who looked like you before their names were demonized, erased, or forgotten.
Who were these black gods? Why were they removed from history and scripture? And what happens when we speak their names again?
You’re about to find out. But first, like this video, drop a 77 in the comments to awaken the algorithm, and subscribe now because what comes next will shake the foundations of everything you’ve been told.
A Forgotten History
Let’s go back—not just to Genesis, but before Genesis.
Before Moses received the tablets, before Abraham heard a voice in the desert, before the name Yahweh ever echoed through sacred texts.
Because long before the rise of monotheism, the world already knew God—but not in the image we’ve been taught.
Across the ancient landscapes of Africa, Mesopotamia, and the Indus Valley, there existed powerful spiritual systems.
These were not primitive myths or folklore.
They were organized, reverent, and sophisticated networks of divine knowledge where black-skinned gods were worshiped—not as distant deities, but as intimate guides, creators, and protectors of the people.
In Kemet (ancient Egypt), they were called the Nuru gods and goddesses—Isis, Osiris, Anubis, Thoth—divine beings depicted with dark skin, woolly hair, broad noses, and powerful presence.
They ruled not just over death and the afterlife, but over truth, balance, wisdom, medicine, time, and the cosmos.
Among the Yoruba, they were known as Orishas—Shango, Obatala, Oshun—spiritual forces who lived among the people, walked in nature, and moved through storms, rivers, and fire.
They were black gods, deeply connected to the earth, speaking the languages of the ancestors.
Even in ancient Sumer, the cradle of early civilization, we find the Anunnaki described in clay tablets as dark-skinned beings shining like burnished bronze who came from the heavens to guide, teach, and govern.
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Why Are We Not Told?
So why don’t we hear these names in Sunday school?
Because their stories were erased intentionally.
Because they were too real.
Because they represented a spiritual authority that challenged later systems of control.
To colonize a people, you must first colonize their god.
And so the black gods were stripped of their тιтles, renamed, demonized, or erased entirely.
And in their place, a new image was enthroned. A white European-looking god with blue eyes, straight hair, and cold perfection.
The Hidden Truth in Scripture
Even in the Bible, if you read closely, you’ll find traces of a truth that has been hidden in plain sight.
In Psalm 82, Yahweh stands in the midst of a divine ᴀssembly, a council of gods, and declares, “You are gods, children of the most high, but you shall die like men.”
God speaking to other gods.
How is that possible if Yahweh has always been the one and only?
The original Hebrew word used throughout the Old Testament is Elohim.
And here’s the part most pastors won’t tell you: Elohim is plural. It doesn’t mean just God. It means gods.
In fact, in Deuteronomy 32:8-9, it says that the Most High divided the nations, ᴀssigning a divine being to each people, while Yahweh received Israel as his portion.
In other words, other nations had their own gods.
So what happened to them? Who were these beings that once ruled the nations? And why have their names vanished from our religious memory?
This is where spiritual colonization begins—not with swords and chains, but with text, translation, and theological manipulation.

The Forbidden Book: Enoch and the Watchers
What we now call heresy may once have been truth that threatened the power structures of empire and organized religion.
Take, for example, the book of Enoch, an ancient Hebrew text that was once widely respected by early Jewish and Christian communities.
In it, we read about the Watchers, divine beings who descended from the heavens and taught humanity sacred knowledge—agriculture, medicine, astronomy, spiritual wisdom, and the language of the stars.
They were givers of light, guardians of humanity.
And yes, many scholars described them as dark-skinned, radiant, and powerful.
But instead of being celebrated, they were branded as fallen.
The book that told their story was erased from the Bible, declared non-canonical, hidden away, except in Ethiopia, where African spiritual memory refused to forget.
The War on Black Gods: Spiritual Colonization
And in their place, a new spiritual system was installed.
A system not built on wisdom and empowerment, but on fear and obedience.
A theology designed not to uplift the soul, but to control it.
Where questioning is rebellion and submission is salvation.
They replaced divine intimacy with distance.
They replaced cosmic knowledge with legalism.
They replaced the black gods who taught us to know ourselves with a god who demanded we fear him.
This is how scripture was rewritten.
This is how spiritual colonization happened.
Not just on land, but in the soul.

The Truth Is Still Standing
This story isn’t just written in scripture.
It’s carved in stone, etched in temple walls, preserved in the dust of museums across the world.
The truth they tried to hide is still standing for all to see.
If we dare to look with awakened eyes, visit the British Museum, the Louvre, the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
You’ll see them there.
Statues of gods, pharaohs, and scribes with unmistakably black features—broad noses, full lips, coiled or braided hair, and deep brown skin painted in resin or natural pigment.
In Kemet, gods like Osiris were depicted with rich ebony skin—not as a symbol, but as truth.
His color represented not only fertility and resurrection, but the literal melanin of the earth, the blackness of origin.
Isis, Anubis, Thoth—they too were painted and sculpted with features rooted in African idenтιтy.
These were not myths.
They were deified ancestors—embodiments of cosmic order, wisdom, and spiritual power.
The Whitewashing of Divinity
In Mesopotamia, the Anunnaki were described in Sumerian tablets as radiant beings with skin like burnished bronze, a poetic and powerful way to describe dark shining skin.
These divine beings were credited with teaching math, writing, astronomy, and civilization itself.
So, if the oldest civilizations depicted their gods as black, why are we worshiping white images today?
The answer is painful but clear: because erasure was intentional.
Noses were broken from statues to erase ethnic idenтιтy.
Pigments were faded or whitewashed in restorations.
Museum labels avoid race entirely.
And religious insтιтutions remain silent even as the evidence stands before us in granite and gold.
To admit that the divine once wore black skin is to dismantle centuries of lies, to challenge the whitewashed portraits of Jesus, the angels, and the prophets.
It is to return power to those from whom it was stolen.
https://youtu.be/I9wVIjQsfqk
The Final Revelation: Spiritual Warfare and Liberation
This was spiritual warfare designed to sever black people from the divine reflection in their own mirror.
Because when a people see themselves in God, they rise differently.
They walk with a different posture.
They pray with a different fire.
Now, here is where the truth lies. It’s not just hidden in ancient texts or museum cases; it’s within us all, waiting to be remembered.