Consider the Sparrows and the Nature of Ravens (Luke 12:24)
Written by Carol Serpa (Grams Gold) on .
Many people remember the passage “Consider the Sparrows” in the Bible, but now it reads “ravens”. The video below explores the vast difference in characteristics between the two birds, and how ravens symbolize demonic spirits and witchcraft.
For me, in all my 40 years of listening to sermons and other years of directly reading the New Testament, I had never heard of the phrase "Consider the ravens..." until the Mandela Effect in 2016. The fact that ravens have replaced sparrows in a couple of places in the Bible, namely being added in the Genesis flood story, is an insertion of a bird with an evil nature. This mirrors the whole Mandela Effect, which is the addition of evil themes in the Bible. Ravens are opportunistic omnivores that prey upon and trick other animals.
Consider the ravens: for they neither sow nor reap; which neither have storehouse nor barn; and God feedeth them: how much more are ye better than the fowls?
Ravens, which are large crows, are the favorite bird of witchcraft. In mythology (which actually may be true) "the raven is a harbinger of death.
Witches and sorcerers were believed to have the ability to transform themselves into ravens and fly away, thus enabling them to evade capture.
The Native Americans often saw the raven as a trickster, much like Coyote. There are a number of tales regarding the mischief of Raven, who is sometimes seen as a symbol of transformation. In the legends of various tribes, Raven is typically associated with everything from the creation of the world to the gift of sunlight to mankind. Some tribes knew the raven as a stealer of souls.
Crows sometimes appear as a method of divination. For the ancient Greeks, the crow was a symbol of Apollo in his role as god of prophecy.
For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft
There shall not be found among you any one that maketh his son or his daughter to pass through the fire, or that useth divination, or an observer of times, or an enchanter, or a witch
Watch for more great residual: