Part 1: The Generational Betrayal
Let’s open a door most parents keep locked…
and grandparents guard with trembling hands.
Let’s talk about the wound few will admit they caused.
You lied to your children.
Not an accident.
Not a harmless story.
Not “just for fun.”
You built entire traditions out of things that were not true.
You crafted illusions:
• Santa
• Elves
• Flying reindeer
• Christmas “spirit”
• Easter Bunny
• Magical egg hunts
• Tooth Fairy
• Decorated trees
• “Holy days” YHWH never made holy
You didn’t lie once.
You lied for years.
You protected the lie.
You fed it.
You defended it.

And here’s the part that cuts:
A child doesn’t simply stop believing in Santa.
A child starts questioning the people who raised them.
Trust doesn’t collapse in one moment.
It erodes — like rot beneath a floorboard.
You told them:
“Trust me.”
“I wouldn’t lie to you.”
“Believe what I say.”
And then you proved the opposite.
You created a world where the people they rely on most
are the same people who constructed the illusion.
This is the psychological fracture we pretend isn’t real.
Because the moment a child realizes
their parents deliberately invented a fantasy…
they ask the question every parent dreads:
“If they lied about Santa…
what else isn’t true?”
And that’s when the real fear begins.
Because the next thing they examine
is the thing you swore was sacred:
their faith.
You told them the Messiah’s name was “Jesus.”
You told them Christmas honored His birth.
You told them Easter honored His resurrection.
You told them these traditions were holy.
But eventually they learn:
• The English name “Jesus” is a recent spelling —
the Hebrew name is Yahusha/Yeshua.
• European art reshaped the Messiah into a Renaissance European man —
far from a 1st-century Israelite.
• The early followers of Yahusha kept Torah and honored YHWH’s appointed times —
not the holidays invented centuries later.
• Yahusha Himself obeyed YHWH’s commandments (Matt. 5:17–19; John 15:10).
• Many today use the name “Jesus” to cancel the very obedience Yahusha lived.
And your children — your grandchildren — begin to wonder:
“If the traditions were false…
did they tell me the truth about God?”
That is the moment the soul cracks.
Not from rebellion —
but from revelation.
Because deception most likely started right in their own living room.
Under a Christmas tree.
Beside an Easter basket.
Through parents saying:
“Don’t question it — it’s tradition.”
Every small lie prepares a heart to accept a bigger one.
And the greatest lie of all?
Replacing Yahusha’s obedience with a faith that excuses disobedience,
and replacing YHWH’s appointed ways with human tradition.
One day your children will hear the Name YHWH.
They will feel something stir —
a truth untouched by traditions.
And they will remember
who lied to them first.
This is not just a message.
It is a mirror.
And most people are terrified
to look into it.
And after all that —
after exposing the lies, the customs, the generational deception —
there’s one final truth that must be spoken:
I was guilty of it too.
I once told the same stories.
Followed the same traditions.
Passed down the same lies —
not because I wanted to deceive,
but because I never questioned what the world and Christianity handed down to me.
Shame on me
for not searching the Scriptures.
Shame on me
for trusting culture over YHWH’s Word.
Shame on me
for defending the traditions of men
instead of seeking the truth of YHWH.
But that’s the difference
between the blind and the awakened:
The blind defend the lie.
The awakened stop repeating it.
I can’t undo what I once taught —
but I can expose what I once believed.
I can break the cycle.
And I can make sure the next generation
inherits truth instead of deception.
Because once you finally see the lie…
you can never go back to protecting it.
So what’s next? Please go to Part 2.

