Blacks are the lepers of our society

The following teaching from Yohanan Abraham & Eugene Spriggs is titled “Leprosy”.

Leprosy …. A People
Slow …. insidious ….. imperceptible ….. deadly!!!!  If one were to describe leprosy, the above words would be necessary as part of the description.  Most cases of leprosy come as a surprise.  The causative agent stays in the body for up to three years before the signs and symptoms start to appear.  This means that for three years the victim walks around thinking he is perfectly normal, yet within him is the sentence to a horrible, devastating form of death.
Before modern technology and the loss of common sense, lepers were rejected from society …. outcasts ….untouchables ….. unapproachable …. unacceptable.  People wanted to protect their society from contamination by contact.  They knew that lepers were “unclean,” whether they had that terminology in their society or not.
A leper was perhaps the loneliest person in the world …. longing for another life … wishing he could be different …hoping that it would, by some miracle, just go away.  Only in the last few moments of his ravaged life does the hard reality strike him ….  there is no healing.  Like a leper, Cham spends his whole life being superficially
“ac-ceptable.”  When, in reality, he is neither accepted, nor acceptable.  He feels always held at a distance, never able to come close, or be approved of.
As a people, Cham’s whole being aches for that approval.  He tries every false, empty way to gain it.  Cham desires the approval of Shem, and of God.  He can psychologically – convince himself of God’s approval through the influence of the numerous churches so prevalent among Chamites, but the reality of Shem’s rejection – rather Shem’s insistence that Cham remain in his “place,” reminds Cham that God is not pleased with his striving, his arrogance, and his rebellion.  Cham, instead of humbling himself, becomes even more arrogant and rebellious (except for those truly sensitive ones who receive their lot, and are grateful to a merciful God, as far as they can understand things).
What makes Cham unacceptable, full of strife, longing to be accepted? The answer lies in history.  Everyone knows the story of Noah and his three sons, how they built the ark in the midst of a time of turmoil and corruption that had reached its peak …  So much so that the day of toleration was to end as soon as Noah and his family entered the ark.  Noah’s sons were men well advanced in age upon entering the ark.  It took them and Noah more than 100 years to build it.  They were not naive little boys.  They were aware of the kinds of corruption that filled the earth to the point that God had to destroy all humanity, except for a remnant.  There was, therefore, no excuse for Cham’s later behavior.
Being the only human beings to survive the flood, Noah and his sons, and their families had the incredible opportunity to repopulate the earth with a righteous people, all turning their hearts to the God of Noah …..  They were given the same command as Adam was given before he fell ….. to be fruitful and multiply, filling the earth with those who would honor God with all their hearts, as Noah did.  That’s why Cham’s sin was so serious.
Embarking on this journey into a new age had no deep significance to Cham.  He saw, and understood how the corruption in people had destroyed all humanity just a few days before, yet he didn’t allow it to affect his own heart.  He had allowed the decadence and immorality  he had seen around him while growing up to find a comfortable place in his heart.  He carried it from the age of destruction into the new age.  A defilement as deadly as radiation, ready to be released upon a yet unborn humanity.  The defilement was subtle and seemingly insignificant.
Cham went to his brothers, after having seen his father lying in his tent, to defile them with his description of what he saw – his own corrupt and defiled heart gushing out his detestable rottenness.  That’s how Shem and Yapheth received Cham’s words and spirit.  They saw the dishonor and disrespect.  They remembered the flood and why it happened.  Together Shem and Japheth delivered two-thirds of mankind in their loins from being cursed.  They sensed the magnitude of such defilement – backing into the tent, they preserved their father’s dignity, and their own race ….. and covered him.
By that one act Cham plunged his descendants into a morass of behavior, attitudes, and mind-set that have plagued and imprisoned the whole race down to this day.  Noah’s curse upon Cham’s son Canaan was real and valid.  All heaven supported and assured its effectiveness.
Noah was God’s only spokesman … the curse must go into effect.  Canaan and his descendants were cursed to be slaves to the descendants of Shem and Japheth who saw the value of preserving what is good and righteous.
Shem and Japheth honored their father above all else except God.  How can serving be a curse?  It is a curse when one’s tendency and desire is not to serve.  Cham was lazy and perverted.  Noah, his father, knew him well, and he was aware of the fact that Cham would put his fallenness into …. pass on his iniquities to his son Canaan.  Noah knew the son would be just like the father and worse.  Therefore serving, being in a low place ….. the very thing Cham’s seed hated and avoided …. this was to be upon the seed of Cham until it went into their genes and chromosomes, causing the race to be known for their servitude and hospitality.
Through the centuries of history this curse was never realized until Shem took his ships and brought Cham to his tents.  Then began the training … the discipline.  It was clearly as Noah spoke it.  Most of Cham’s descendant’s submitted …. Many chose to rebel ….. masking their rebellion with the “noble” cry for freedom from the “oppressor.”  The rebels encountered the solid wall of resistance in the form of harsh discipline, and even death.  Those who chose to submit found loving masters who cared for their needs …. masters who wept when they were sick or dying …. who entrusted their own flesh and blood to be nursed on the breasts of Cham.
Shem, the eldest son of Noah ….. lovingly carried out the discipline of our Father for the good of his baby brother Cham who was the youngest son of Noah.  Cham found his place.  He found acceptance and approval while in submission.
He was given responsibility, and his gifting came out in marvelous ways especially in the culinary arts, and in serving.  To this day no one especially can cook and serve like Cham when he is submissive.
There was peace, and there was order.  Shem, who lived by the covenant God made with man after Adam fell understood in his spirit this discipline of servitude was good for the race of Cham and for humanity.  But those of Shem who rejected the instinctive knowledge of God, and the instinctive understanding of God’s ways strove against God’s purpose for Cham’s healing.
Men rose up among Cham …. “leaders.”  Men crying out for “justice” in the name of God, while working against the very machinery God had instituted.  Shem became affected by the outcry, and began supporting Cham, while in his heart not wanting to be near him.  Shem was not making laws to make things easier for Cham because he loved him – he made those laws because of political pressure from both Cham and fallen Shem who have no place for the knowledge of God in their hearts.   Cham knew he was not accepted.  The black liberation movement, accompanied by much pomp and circumstance, proclaimed “Freedom.”
Shem was successfully made to feel guilty for carrying out the purpose of God which was meant for the healing of a race ….  The contamination entered every phase of American and European life.  Civil Rights became Human Rights…..Gay Rights ….. women’s Lib …. Cham now had no loving master.  There was no place in this modern society where his perverted bent, inherited from his progenitor, could be dealt with, and he could be brought into order, fulfilling the instinctive purpose God put into him.
He strives now to be like Shem.  In this unstable territory he is suspicious, angry, bitter.  Whether he becomes president of a large corporation, economically successful, or even president of the United States …. the ever -present droning goes on in his spirit …Cham is neither accepted, nor acceptable …. Every member of the race of Cham who has ever lived in the midst of Shem knows the deep loneliness, insecurity, and the fears of not being accepted …. being told that you are not acceptable.  It matters not how strongly Cham denies it, or uses his success as a means of denial … he feels the alienation.
God’s purpose and plan in the cursing of Cham was to bring about through that discipline, a people who would serve willingly, thus making them worthy of the nations.  Many will be great in the nations, because they chose to submit to their masters…..the instruments of God’s choice.
Now, through Yahshua, there is the lifting of the curse that has plagued Cham through the centuries.  Only in Him can Cham be made acceptable, and be accepted.  Only in that place where Yahshua’s life is a living demonstration can Cham find those who will receive him as a human being worthy of the dignity that is inherent in those created in God’s image.  In that place Cham can begin to learn to be who he was created to be ….serving right alongside of Shem and Japheth who always served from the beginning.  Brothers finally serving brothers on an equal basis, as priests of God….truly submitting to one another.  Those warm, loving hands, kind voice; compassionate eyes are living reality where God has gathered those who were once “lepers” from every nation and people.
Shalom from
Yochanan Abraham in Sus