
The Case Against Paul The Apostle
Jacqueline Clarke(Author)
Lulu.com (Publisher)
Published on 11. April 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
290 pages
978-1-291-72920-7 (ISBN)
Description
The Case Against Paul The Apostle
We were taught that Paul was an apostle. That his letters were scripture. That his authority came from the Creator. But authority leaves a trace in the letters, and the ancient Hebrew pictographs do not confirm what we were told.
This book goes back to the letters. the same ancient pictographs used to build the text Paul drew from. Letter by letter. Picture by picture. The same method. Just honest eyes. What the letters show is a mouth operating without the mark of the Creator behind it, declaring authority that was never his to declare, and building doctrine on a foundation the letters had already exposed. It shows a redirection of the designated people away from what was written for them, and toward what the unauthorised seed needed them to accept.
This is the text examined from the inside. The case presented here is built on sixty separate reasons. This book is Part One, lays the foundation: the language problem, the standard that was already in place, the Masoretic layer, and the mouth identified. It examines who authorised it, what it removed, what it replaced, and what it reassigned, along with the doctrines it introduced that have no root in ancient Hebrew at all. The rest follows in the series.
By the end of this volume, you will already have enough to see it clearly.
The letters do not lie.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 148 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
424 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-291-72920-7 (9781291729207)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Jacqueline Clarke began this work on 9th October 2023, when the Creator revealed to her the discrepancies in the New Testament that could not be explained by translation alone. What followed next were a series of dreams and visions she was then directed back to the ancient Hebrew pictographs - to the letters themselves, before the vowel systems, before the translation layers, before pronouns, prefixes, suffixes and syntax and before the pictures were stripped of their meaning.
It was the Creator who showed her how to read them. The research that followed confirmed what she had already been shown.
The Devouring Basket documents that journey chapter by chapter. It opens with how interpretation came to replace the text itself, then moves into the parcel that must be delivered, the mechanism of the devouring basket, and the blueprint - the longest section of the book - which traces precisely how the seed was made submissive from the very beginning. From there the book exposes how house-authority was replaced by contract, separates the revealed seed from the unauthorised seed, examines what David and Solomon actually built, traces what happened when the seed was divided, and arrives at the awakening - because that is where we are now.
This is not commentary. It is not theology. It is the letters read as pictures, in the order they were always meant to be read, revealing a structure and a warning that runs unbroken from Genesis to the present day.
Jacqueline Clarke did not choose this subject. She was sent back to it.
This book is what she found when she looked.