Editor’s Preface (Omega-Sam-2, Initiator Class)
Welcome to this special edition of our newsletter.
Ordinarily, we dive deep into the underreported impacts of the COVID-19 vaccine (a bioweapon)… and the tangled geopolitical threads of our times.
However, today we must address WHY we are turning our gaze toward the age old human experience of “betrayal.”
It’s essential for my readers to understand the struggle against these global forces is not merely political or medical… it’s deeply personal and spiritual.
Just as the vaccine represents a breach of trust at a societal level, the theme of personal betrayal mirrors the fractures in our own relationships and soul contracts.
I highlight betrayal because it’s the same underlying wound—whether on a global stage… or focused in a single human heart.
Understanding this connection is crucial, because healing one thread helps us heal the other.
In short, we dive into betrayal here not to stray from our mission, but to illuminate it.
The same forces that betray the body… also betray the soul.
By facing this truth, we reclaim our power on every level.
Some wounds close with time, others heal with forgiveness, but there exists a class of betrayal so profound it rewrites destinies.
These are not the quarrels of neighbors or the broken promises of politicians.
These are the ruptures of soul-covenant—where trust was not simply human but woven into divine assignment. Today we unmask the nature of such betrayals and why their reverberations echo across Eternity.
“Et tu, Brute?” — the lament of Caesar to his most trusted friend, captures in four words the eternal shock of the dagger closest to the heart.
Transmission Memo
The Spirit makes clear:
Ordinary betrayals die in the dustbin of history, yet betrayals against covenantal thrones alter the architecture of timelines:
-
Cain did not merely slay Abel; he fractured the first pattern of brotherhood.
-
Judas did not merely betray a Rabbi; he attempted to sever the Bridge of Redemption.
-
Absalom did not merely rise against his father David; he set himself against the throne that God Himself had anointed.
The implication for us now:
In this era of collapsing institutions, global manipulations, and exposed frauds, the betrayals that matter most are not those splashed across headlines but those that cut into covenantal alignments.
For it is these betrayals—whether in politics, pulpits, or personal consort bonds—that release shockwaves felt in realms both seen and unseen.
“For it is not an enemy who taunts me—then I could bear it; it is not an adversary who deals insolently with me—then I could hide from him. But it is you, my companion, my familiar friend.”
— Psalm 55:12–13
The Dutch Uncle Narrative
Let’s not mince words: betrayal is hell.
It’s acid poured on the soul.
Yet not all betrayals are equal.
Some sting, then pass.
Others brand themselves into the marrow of Eternity.
Think of Cain and Abel.
This was not a rivalry of crops; it was the first fracture of priesthood.
Abel’s offering aligned with heaven; Cain’s rejection spawned resentment.
When Cain rose up against Abel, he struck at the very architecture of worship.
The blood of Abel cried out from the ground—not for vengeance alone, but because his murder distorted the covenantal channel between heaven and earth.
Now consider Judas and Christ.
Thirty silver coins bought the eternal infamy of a man whose kiss was a death warrant.
History is littered with traitors, but why does Judas remain the archetype?
Because he broke intimacy at the highest level of trust: one who ate at the same table, shared the same secrets, touched the same miracles.
And then Absalom and David.
The betrayal of a son toward his father, not for justice but for ambition, not for righteousness but for the throne itself.
Absalom sought not simply to displace David but to rewrite divine succession.
Scripture records that his vanity and manipulation ended with his hair tangled in a tree—suspended between heaven and earth… judged by both.
These betrayals were not social fractures—they were cosmic incursions.
And here lies the hard truth: every soul-covenant betrayal, whether in marriage, friendship, or leadership, is not simply a wound to a man or woman.
It’s an affront to Divine Design.
“The trust of the innocent is the liar’s most useful tool.” — Stephen King
Modern Analogues
Fast-forward to our time:
-
Governments spy on their citizens while swearing loyalty to their constitutions.
-
Allies abandon allies at the altar of expedience.
-
Lovers exploit intimacy only to trade it for fleeting gain.
-
Political Betrayals: Think of cabinet secretaries who undermine their president while smiling in his presence. Think of senators who campaign on promises they never intended to keep. These are not simply deceptions; they are assaults on covenantal trust with the people.
-
Consort Betrayals: The most searing of all, when a partner pledged in fidelity weaponizes intimacy against the very one who covered them. This is not “moving on.” This is desecrating sacred trust.
“He who opens a door for betrayal closes the Gate of Destiny.” — Aleksander
The media will tell you betrayal is just “part of politics,” just “part of relationships.”
Don’t be fooled.
Each act of betrayal at the covenantal level is a cosmic rupture.
History’s empires have fallen not merely from invading armies but from rot within—the Brutus at Caesar’s side, the Judas at Christ’s table, the Absalom at David’s gate.
The Teachable Moment
So… what’s to be learned?
Betrayal is inevitable; Christ Himself was betrayed.
But what distinguishes the Sovereign from the broken is not the avoidance of betrayal but the discernment of its class.
-
Ordinary betrayals: forgive, release, move forward. They are shadows, painful but passing.
-
Soul-covenant betrayals: name them, seal them, and mark the eternal lesson. These reshape timelines. These force new thrones to be built.
“The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in times of great moral crisis, maintain their neutrality.” — Dante Alighieri
The enemy always seeks to place a dagger within arm’s reach of your throne. But here is the Christic Seal: the throne stands. The betrayal is noted, judged, and recalibrated into sovereign advantage.
“No weapon formed against you shall prosper, and every tongue that rises against you in judgment you shall condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord.”
— Isaiah 54:17
Wrap-Up on Mission Relevance
We’re not here to wallow in the pain of betrayal.
We’re here to decode its deeper geometry: betrayal against soul-covenant is an initiation:
-
It reveals the Judas, but it also reveals the Christ.
-
It unveils the Absalom, but it affirms the David.
-
It exposes the Cain, but it honors the Abel whose blood still speaks.
And so the counsel is clear:
When betrayal comes against your throne, stand. Do not crawl. For common betrayals fade like smoke, but covenantal betrayals only confirm that you were seated at a table worth attacking.
P.S.
Those who betrayed you have already inscribed their names in the ledger of eternity.
Do not beg them for closure; the court of heaven has already convened.
Your task is not to re-litigate but to enthrone.
“Treachery is not just an act against a person; it is a rebellion against the order of heaven.” — Omega-Sam-2
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: Samuel Robinson Kephart
This content is courtesy of, and owned and copyrighted by, https://vaxxfacts.substack.com and its author. This content is made available by use of the public RSS feed offered by the host site and is used for educational purposes only. If you are the author or represent the host site and would like this content removed now and in the future, please contact USSANews.com using the email address in the Contact page found in the website menu.