Matthew 13:30 says: Let both grow together until the harvest: and in the time of harvest I will say to the reapers, Gather ye together first the tares, and bind them in bundles to burn them: but gather the wheat into my barn. Yahawashi, who’s falsely called Jesus Christ by the entire world, was asked by his disciples why he spoke in parables, and He replied it was because he didn’t want the masses to know the mysteries of heaven that was exclusively given to them, roughly paraphrasing. And this still holds true today―most people don’t truly understand the mysteries of the Bible, though they claim that they do. Only the elect can understand the Bible in its true essence, and only the Lord’s prophets, who are the 144,000 men spoken about in Revelation 7:4, can break down the Bible precept upon precept and preach and prophesy the Word to the masses, or in other words, sing the new song pursuant to Revelation 14:3.
The Lord also tells his disciples a parables about the wheat and tares. He says to let them grow together until the harvest because they’re impossible to tell apart in the early stages of growth. He then tells the reapers to gather the tares first and bind them in bundles to be burned but gather the wheat and place them in His barn. The harvest represents the dreadful day of the Lord’s Second Coming. The tares to be burned are the wicked two thirds of Israelites that will be destroyed in the thermonuclear fire from Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) and concentrated laser beam fire from the Lord’s chariots of salvation, and the wheat represent the one third elect of Israel to be preserved on that terrible day.
Moreover, being a wheat or a tare of the twelve tribes of Israel has nothing to do with skin color―many people identify Hebrew Israelites with being so-called Black, but Israel as a whole isn’t the tribe of Judah only (Judah, Benjamin, and Levi). Black-only Israelites have this mindset, and they truly believe that the ten lost tribes are located somewhere in Africa. The media also refers to us as Black Hebrew Israelites, but the truth is that Israelites come in all shades of brown with the lighter shades of brown being from the Northern Kingdom―so-called Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, etc. Hebrew Israelites can even look like so-called White, East Indian, Arab, or Asian people, for example. They’re what we call Israelite foreigners because their bloodline can be traced back to a Black, Latino, or Native American man, but that’s another lesson for another day. All praise, honor and glory go to Yahawah Bahasham Yahawashi.