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School of the Prophets

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Liberated Leadership Movement

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2 contributions to School of the Prophets
Trauma, Curses, and the Awakening of Yasharal
Many people can quote the blessings of Deuteronomy 28. But for scattered Yasharal, trauma often speaks louder than blessing because trauma was lived, inherited, remembered, and carried in the body. Captivity. Fear. Broken homes. Oppression. Bywords. Loss of language. Survival mode. The Torah said the curses would become “a sign and a wonder” upon the seed of Yasharal. The prophets later described a people with trembling hearts, sorrow of mind, and forgotten identity. That is not abstract theology. That is generational trauma. But here is the hard question: Can a people recognize the covenant through suffering… yet still struggle to imagine restoration because pain has overshadowed promise? Ezekiel saw dry bones before he saw an army. Psalm 137 showed captives who could not even sing in a strange land. Lamentations spoke of children bearing the consequences of former generations. Yet the prophets never allowed trauma to become the final identity of Yasharal. The awakening begins when remembrance turns into repentance, and repentance turns into restoration. So the question is not only:“Who carries the curses?” But also:“Who is beginning to remember the covenant?” What are your thoughts? Can trauma itself become evidence of exile while also becoming the greatest obstacle to believing in restoration?
1 like • 2h
I think trauma can make people expect exile more than restoration because survival mode becomes normal. Pain becomes identity instead of just a season. I relate deeply to the wilderness side of scripture. Some of my darkest seasons were also where I encountered God most clearly through prayer, discernment, scripture, dreams, and inner conviction. But I don’t think God wants people to stay rooted in trauma, curses, or broken identity. Dry bones were never meant to stay dry. The breath of God changed everything.
0 likes • 1h
@Malak Yahiya It does indeed
Song of Moses
The Song of Moses is not locked in the past—it stretches from warning to fulfillment. In Deuteronomy 32, Moses writes a witness against Yasharal: a song of remembrance, rebellion, judgment, and mercy. It confronts a people who would forget Yahawah, yet promises that He will avenge, restore, and show compassion. This is covenant truth—uncomfortable, unchanging. Then Revelation 15 reveals the end of the matter. The victorious stand before the throne, singing the Song of Moses and the Song of the Lamb (Yahawasha). What began as a warning becomes a testimony of deliverance. The pattern is clear: Golah (exile) gives way to Galah (revealing). Judgment refines, and redemption completes. The same song is sounding now. Will it be heard as correction—or only recognized after deliverance? Do not let it pass as poetry. It is a witness. Read Deuteronomy 32. Read Revelation 15. Let the song search you, align you, and call you back to covenant. Return—and be counted among those who sing in victory.
0 likes • 2h
Awesome 🔥
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Emma Paul
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@emma-paul-2805
Mum, partner, sister, daughter, hair artist, Psychology student, boxer and all round badass fairy.....basically Tinkerbell.

Active 1h ago
Joined May 13, 2026
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