The fall of the angel, right? Yeah. Which is you're in another place.
You're in another realm. In 1947, a Bedawin shepherd named Muhammad Adib was searching for a lost goat in the desolate cliffs overlooking the Dead Sea. Frustrated, he threw a rock into a dark cave opening and heard the unmistakable sound of pottery shattering.
What he found inside that cave would force scholars to rewrite 1,700 years of biblical history. Tens of thousands of scroll fragments, ancient Hebrew and Aramaic texts, some dating back to the 3rd century before Christ. And hidden among them carefully copied onto worn parchment, were 11 manuscripts of a book that the Western Christian Church had spent centuries trying to erase, the Book of Enoch.
But here's where the story gets strange. 8,000 mi away from those desert caves, perched on sheer mountain cliffs accessible only by rope and bare hands, Ethiopian Orthodox monks had been preserving the complete book of Enoch for over a thousand years. Not fragments, not scattered pieces, the entire text, cover to cover, generation after generation.
While western Christianity was declaring these scriptures apocryphal, forbidden, dangerous, heretical, Ethiopian monks were copying them by candle light in remote monasteries, believing they were protecting divine revelation. So, here's the question no one wants to answer. What does this ancient text reveal about Jesus Christ that powerful institutions decided you weren't supposed to see?
And here's the even bigger question. In 2027, Hollywood director Mel Gibson is releasing a two-part film called The Resurrection of the Christ. And the vision he's described sounds nothing like the gentle Jesus of Sunday school.
Gibson has said the film will show Christ moving through other realms, descending through heaven, confronting fallen angels in hell itself. He's calling it his most ambitious project. That there are big realms, spiritual realms.
There's good, there's evil, and they are slugging it out. Some are calling it blasphemous. But if you've read the Ethiopian scriptures, the text that survived when everything else was being censored, you'll recognize that Gibson isn't inventing anything.
He's bringing to the screen a vision of Christ that's been hiding in plain sight for nearly 2,000 years. By the end of this video, you'll understand why that vision was considered too dangerous to share, and what it means for everything you thought you knew about Christianity. Let's begin.
Most Christians in the Western world grow up with a Bible containing a fixed number of books. 66 if you're Protestant, 73 if you're Catholic. That's the [music] canon.
That's scripture. Nothing added, nothing missing. The complete word of God.
but fly 8,000 mi southeast to the ancient highlands of Ethiopia where monasteries cling to cliff faces and monks still chant in a lurggical language older than Latin and you'll encounter a very different Bible. The Ethiopian Orthodox Teahedo church recognizes 81 books in its biblical canon. Some traditions count as many as 88.
That's not a minor variation. That's not a translation difference. that represents entire books of scripture, complete texts [music] with teachings, prophecies, and visions that exist nowhere else in the Christian world.
Books like the complete book of Enoch, the book of Jubilees, the Ascension of Isaiah, three books of Mechabayan that replace the [music] Mcabes. Texts that early Christians read, quoted, and considered sacred until church councils centuries later decided they were too dangerous for ordinary believers to access. And the evidence that these texts are ancient and legitimate doesn't come from legends or church tradition.
It comes from archaeology. [music] In the remote Abarima monastery in Ethiopia's Tigra region sits a manuscript known as the Germa Gospels. Scholars from Oxford University used radiocarbon dating to test the parchment.
The results stunned them. These manuscripts date to between 330 and 660 CE. That makes them among the oldest surviving illustrated Christian manuscripts on Earth.
And they've never left their home. When conservation specialists arrived to help preserve them, they had to climb the sheer cliff face and set up their equipment in the monastery courtyard because under no circumstances would the monks allow these sacred texts to be removed. This is not a recent development.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Church traces its roots to the 4th century when [music] King Eza of Axom converted the kingdom to Christianity. That makes Ethiopia one of the oldest continuously Christian nations in the world, older than most of Europe. When Islamic expansion swept across North Africa and the Middle East in the 7th century, Ethiopia became something extraordinary.
a Christian island geographically isolated, surrounded by Muslim territories, preserving traditions and texts that much of the Christian world would eventually lose or deliberately suppress. The isolation mattered. Ethiopia wasn't present for the great councils that would reshape Christianity.
Ethiopian bishops didn't participate in the debates, the power struggles, the political maneuvering that decided which books would be in and which would be out. We cannot compromise on the dual nature of Christ. He is fully God and fully man, conssubstantial with the Father.
They just kept copying their scriptures, the same scriptures they'd always had, the same books their ancestors had received when Christianity first arrived. And now, 17 centuries later, those manuscripts are forcing uncomfortable questions. If these texts were sacred to the earliest Christians, if apostolic communities read them, quoted them, and taught from them, why were they taken away from you?
And what did they contain that was so dangerous? If you want to explore more forgotten history that challenges everything you thought you knew, subscribe to Stone and Bone. We're just getting started.
And remember the judgment of the Watchers and of the Holy Ones and how they turned aside in the days of Jared. Let's talk about what the Book of Enoch actually says. And I've seen a lot of people portray Jesus in films and I never buy it.
Something something's not right or discordant. First Enoch, as scholars call it, to distinguish it from two other books attributed to the same figure, [music] is a collection of five separate texts compiled over several centuries. The oldest sections are estimated to have been written around 300 B.
CE. The latest portions may date to 100 B. CE.
That means the book of Enoch predates Christianity by 2 to three centuries. It's named after Enoch, the great-grandfather of Noah, who according to Genesis 5:24, walked faithfully with God. Then he was no more because God took him away.
He didn't die. He was taken directly into the presence of God. The book attributed to him describes what he saw there.
But for nearly 2,000 years, Western scholars had only heard about this book secondhand. It was quoted by early church fathers. References appeared in other ancient texts.
But the complete manuscript had vanished until 1947 when archaeologists began excavating the Dead Sea Scrolls from the caves at Kuman. They found fragments of nearly every book of the Hebrew Bible. And they found something else.
11 separate Aramaic manuscripts of the Book of Enoch. Specifically, fragments covering the Book of Watchers, the Astronomical Book, and [music] portions of the other sections. These weren't medieval copies.
They were ancient carbon dated to the second and third centuries before Christ. Which meant that whatever the book of Enoch was saying, it wasn't a Christian invention. It wasn't a medieval forgery.
It was genuine ancient Jewish apocalyptic literature circulating widely in the centuries before Jesus was born. And then in 2025, something remarkable happened. Researchers at the University of Groingan developed an artificial intelligence program specifically designed to analyze ancient handwriting.
They named it Enoch. When they fed the AI images of the Dead Sea Scroll fragments, it produced dates that pushed many manuscripts 50 to 150 years older than previous estimates. [music] The AI confirms it.
These fragments are much older than we anticipated. Yes, the Enoch data align perfectly. This is remarkable work by the model.
The implications are staggering. The book of Enoch isn't just old. It's one of the foundational texts of second temple Judaism, the religious world into which Jesus was born.
So what does it say? The most controversial section is called the book of parables or the similitudes of Enoch. It's chapters 37-71 and it introduces a figure called the son of man.
Listen to how chapter 46 describes him. And there I saw one who had a head of days, and his head was white like wool. And with him was another being whose appearance was like that of a man, and his face was filled with grace, like one of the holy angels.
Now compare that to Revelation 1:14, written by John of Patmas around 95 CE. His head and hair were white like wool, as white as snow, and his eyes were like blazing fire. The descriptions are nearly identical.
The imagery is too specific to be coincidental. But here's what most people don't realize. The book of Enoch was written at least 200 years before the book of Revelation, which means Revelation may not be introducing a new vision.
It may be echoing something far older. Both texts describe feet like polished bronze. Both mention a voice like rushing waters.
Both speak of a face shining with overwhelming radiance. Both depict eyes like flames of fire. In the book of Enoch, this figure is called the Son of Man, the chosen one, [music] the righteous judge.
He sits on a throne of glory. He judges the wicked. He delivers the righteous.
He exists before the creation of the world. And here's where it gets theologically explosive. Early Christians immediately identified this figure as Jesus Christ.
And the son of man was named before the sun and the moon were created. He is the one whom we call Jesus, the Christ. The Epistle of Jude, part of the [music] New Testament, directly quotes from the book of Enoch.
Jude 1:14-15 says, "Enoch the 7th from Adam prophesied about them. " See, the Lord is coming with thousands upon thousands of his holy ones to judge everyone. That's a word for word citation.
Jude is treating the book of Enoch as authoritative scripture, as a prophetic text worthy of standing alongside the Torah and the prophets. And Jude wasn't alone. Early church fathers like Tolon, Irenaeus, and Clement of Alexandria all quoted from Enoch.
They considered it genuine revelation. But by the 4th century, something changed. As Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire, church leaders began standardizing doctrine.
Councils were convened, creeds were written, and certain books were quietly set aside. The Book of Enoch was one of them. Let those who deem this text apocryphal signify their agreement.
It is decided. This book is excluded from the cannon. At the council of Leodysia in 363 CE, it was formally excluded from the biblical cannon.
By the time Athanasius wrote his influential festival letter in 367 CE, listing the 27 books of the New Testament that would become standard, the book of Enoch was categorized as apocryphal, not heretical exactly, just not for public consumption. And in most of the Christian world, it disappeared. But not in Ethiopia because Ethiopian bishops weren't at those councils.
They never received the decree. They just kept copying the scriptures they'd always known. And 17 centuries later, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church still reads from the book of Enoch in its liturgy, still teaches from it, still considers it the inspired word of God.
The words of the blessing of Enoch, wherewith he blessed the elect and the righteous, who shall be living in the day of tribulation. If the book of Enoch describes WH, the cosmic Christ is another Ethiopian text describes how he entered our reality. It's called the ascension of Isaiah, and it's one of the most theologically daring texts to survive from the early Christian era.
Dating to the late 1st or early 2nd century, roughly contemporary with the book of Revelation, the Ascension of Isaiah tells the story of the prophet Isaiah being taken on a journey through seven levels of heaven. not metaphorical heavens, seven distinct realms, each with its own order of beings, its own architecture, its own degree of closeness to the divine throne. Isaiah ascends level by level.
The first heaven oversees the affairs of Earth. The second governs the movements of stars and planets. The third contains paradise itself, including the tree of life.
As Isaiah climbs higher, the beings he encounters become [music] more radiant, more overwhelming, more impossible to describe in human language. Their brilliance is so intense that Isaiah repeatedly falls to his face, unable to withstand their glory. By the time he reaches the sixth heaven, he can barely function.
The light is beyond anything human eyes were designed to perceive. And then in the seventh heaven, Isaiah beholds the beloved one. This is the pre-incarnate Christ, the logos, the word of God who exists before time through whom all things were made.
And Isaiah watches as this being prepares to descend into the world. But here's where the text becomes extraordinary. Christ doesn't simply travel downward.
He doesn't appear on earth in full divine glory. Instead, the ascension of Isaiah describes a deliberate strategic concealment. At each level of heaven, Christ reduces the intensity of his radiance.
He veils his divinity. He takes on the appearance of the angels at that level. In the sixth heaven, he appears as a being of the sixth order.
In the fifth heaven, as one of the fifth order, and so on, descending layer by layer, dimming his glory at every stage. Why? So that he won't be recognized.
By the time Christ arrives on earth, even the angels of the lower heavens see nothing more than a human infant. They don't perceive the cosmic presence hidden within that fragile body. Only God the Father and the Holy Spirit fully understand what has just happened.
The theological term for this is [music] kinosis, the self-mping of Christ, the voluntary limiting of divine power and glory. But the ascension of Isaiah takes it further. It describes the incarnation not as a simple act of condescension, but as a cosmic undercover operation.
Christ is infiltrating creation, moving through dimensions undetected for a purpose the angels themselves don't fully comprehend. And then comes the crucifixion. In this framework, the cross isn't merely the execution of a righteous man.
It's the moment when the very source of existence experiences non-existence. When the word that spoke reality into being falls silent, when the light that illuminates all things goes dark. It's a cosmic rupture.
The structure of reality itself shutters. And the resurrection, the moment Christ reclaims his full glory, is the most powerful being in the universe, breaking free from the constraints he voluntarily accepted. This is not the gentle Jesus of Renaissance paintings.
This is the radiant, overwhelming, terrifying Christ of the earliest Christian visions. And here's where Mel Gibson enters the [music] story. In 2022, Gibson gave an interview to the National Catholic Register about his long-awaited sequel to The Passion of the Christ.
He explained that the film wouldn't follow a simple linear narrative. It would weave the resurrection together with events across time, across dimensions. The story has to begin with the fall of the angels, Gibson said.
And then he added, you have to go somewhere else altogether. Another realm, you have to go to hell. On Joe Rogan's podcast, Gibson went even further.
He revealed he was working from two scripts, one traditional, one that he described as like an acid trip. There's a lot required because it is I'll [clears throat] just tell you this, it's an acid trip. When we wrote it, it is I've never read anything like it.
He said the film would show Christ moving through realms that don't obey normal rules of time or space. That there are big realms, spiritual realms. There's good, there's evil, and they are slugging it out.
[clears throat] Whether Mel Gibson ever read the Ascension of Isaiah, I don't know. But the vision he's describing Christ descending through multiple dimensions, confronting fallen angels, breaking the barriers between heaven and hell was charted by Christian scribes [music] nearly 2,000 years ago. The script already exists.
It's been waiting in Ethiopian monasteries for 17 centuries. So why did the Western church set these texts aside? This is where we need to be careful.
It's tempting to frame this as a conspiracy. Powerful bishops deliberately hiding the real Jesus to maintain control over the masses. The truth is more complicated.
In the first three centuries of Christianity, there was no central authority, no Vatican, no official cannon. Christianity was a loose network of house churches and regional communities, each with its own traditions, its own sacred texts, its own interpretations of what Jesus taught. Some communities read the book of Enoch.
Others didn't. Some used the Gospel of Thomas. Others rejected it.
Some followed a 364 day solar calendar like the one described in Enoch's astronomical book. Others used the standard lunar calendar. It was messy.
[music] It was diverse. And for a persecuted minority religion, that diversity was survivable. But in 312 CE, everything changed.
Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity. Suddenly, the faith that had been illegal for three centuries was now the favored religion of the most powerful empire on earth. And empires need unity.
You can't run a centralized empire with a decentralized religion. You need standardized doctrine. You need hierarchical authority.
You need everyone reading from the same scriptures, believing the same creeds, answering to the same bishops. So, councils were convened. The council of Nika in 325 CE addressed Christologology battling the Aryan controversy.
Later councils would tackle other theological disputes and gradually informally certain texts began to fall out of favor. The book of Enoch was problematic for several reasons. First, there were serious questions about authorship.
Could a book written centuries before Christ really have been penned by a man who lived before Noah's flood? If not, who wrote it? And if it's pseudonmous, can it really be scripture?
Second, there were theological tensions. The son of man figure in Enoch seemed to occupy a space dangerously close to God himself. In an era when the church was fighting to define the relationship between father and son, texts that blurred those boundaries were unsettling.
Third, and perhaps most importantly, the Book of Enoch and texts like the Ascension of Isaiah emphasize direct mystical experience, visions, journeys through heavenly realms. Personal encounters with angels and divine beings. That kind of spirituality is hard to control.
He is begotten, not made, of the same substance as the father. How can the son be co-eternal if he is begotten? If salvation comes through inner awakening, through personal mystical vision, through direct revelation, then what role does the institutional church play?
Why do you need priests? Why do you need bishops? Why do you need sacraments administered by authorized clergy?
By the late 4th century, the answer was clear. You standardized the texts. You emphasized the gospels and epistles that focus on community, sacraments, and apostolic authority.
and you quietly set aside the texts that encourage believers to seek direct experience of the divine. The council of Leodysia in 363 CE rejected several books. Athanasius's festal letter in 367 CE listed the canonical 27 books of the New Testament and did not include Enoch, Jubilees, or the Ascension of Isaiah.
But these weren't universal decrees. Different regions had different cannons for centuries afterward. The Ethiopian church, geographically isolated and already established, simply continued using the scriptures they'd always used.
It wasn't defiance. It was continuity. And because Ethiopia remained Christian even as Islamic empires rose around it, [music] those texts survived.
Not in Latin, not in Greek, but in Gaes, the ancient lurggical language that only Ethiopian scholars could read. For over a thousand years, the Book of Enoch existed only in Ethiopia until a Bedawin shepherd threw a rock into a cave. There's another text that's central to Ethiopian Christian identity and it's not in any Western Bible at all.
It's called the Kebra Nagast [music] in English, the Glory of Kings. Compiled in the 14th century from much older oral and written traditions, [music] the Kebra Nagast tells the story of the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon. But it doesn't stop where the biblical account ends.
According to the Kebra Nagast, the Queen of Sheba, known in Ethiopia as Mikada, traveled from her kingdom to Jerusalem to meet the famously wise King Solomon. They had a romance and from that union a son was born Menelik the first. Menelik grew up in Ethiopia but when he came of age he traveled to Jerusalem to meet his father.
Solomon recognized him, celebrated him and offered to make him heir to the throne of Israel. I am proud of the man you have become. The future of our people is secure with you.
But Menelik chose to return to Ethiopia. And according to the Kebra Nagast, he didn't return alone. Menelik and a group of young Israelite nobles secretly took the ark of the covenant from the temple in Jerusalem and carried it to Ethiopia.
The text claims that Solomon discovered the theft. Your majesty, I bring terrible news. The Ark of the Covenant has been stolen.
The Ark of the Covenant? Are you certain? But interpreted it as God's will.
A sign that the covenant was transferring from Israel to Ethiopia. Today, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church teaches that the Ark of the Covenant resides in the Church of Street Mary of Zion in Axom, Ethiopia's ancient capital. No one is allowed to see it except a single guardian monk appointed for life.
No photographs, no archaeological verification, purely tradition. Most scholars are skeptical. The story reads like national mythology, a way for Ethiopia to claim a direct covenantal relationship with the God of Israel, positioning itself as the new Zion.
But to Ethiopian Christians, the Keanagost isn't mythology. It's history and it's foundational to their identity. In the 12th century, King Laabella took this identity to its logical conclusion.
He ordered the construction of 11 massive churches not built from stone blocks, but carved downward into solid rock. These are the rock hune churches of Lai Bella, a UNESCO world heritage site and one of the most astonishing architectural achievements in history. According to tradition, King Libella received a vision in which Christ took him on a tour of Jerusalem and instructed him to build a new Jerusalem in Ethiopia.
When Jerusalem fell to Muslim forces in 1187, Ethiopian Christians believed they had become the true inheritors of the holy city. The churches are still in use today. Monks still chant in gayes.
Pilgrims still travel there for major holy days. And every stone, every tunnel, every carved window reinforces the same message. We are not a branch of Christianity.
We are the root. The real significance of the Ethiopian Bible is not that it is older or larger or more exotic than the Western version. It is what its existence forces every thoughtful person to confront.
If the earliest Christians, the actual communities that produced the letters and Gospels of the New Testament, read the book of Enoch, quoted it as authoritative prophecy, and treated texts like the Ascension of Isaiah as sacred revelation. Then the later decision to exclude those books was not a restoration of some original purity. It was an act of editing.
Powerful institutions under enormous political pressure to standardize and control decided what the story of Christianity would be. And for more than a thousand years, most of the world accepted that edited version as the complete one. Not because it was proven to [music] be complete, but because no alternative was available.
The Ethiopian monks did not accept that edited version. They never received the memo. And [music] so across centuries that saw the rise and fall of empires, the Islamic expansion that cut Ethiopia off from the Mediterranean world, the Crusades, the Renaissance, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, and the colonial era.
They simply kept copying. They sat in dim scriptoria lit by oil lamps, grinding ink from local minerals, preparing parchment from animal skins. They shaped every letter of the ancient Geese script by hand with a precision that ruined their eyesight and bent their spines.
They did this not because they thought they were preserving forbidden or controversial literature. They did it because they believed, as their fathers and grandfathers and great-grandfathers had believed, that they were preserving the word of God. All of it, unedited, uncut.
And now, 17 centuries later, that preserved tradition is about to collide with the largest screen on Earth. The Resurrection of the Christ is confirmed as a two-part film. Part one releases on Good Friday, the 26th of March, 2027.
Part two arrives 40 days later on Ascension Day, the 6th of May, 2027. The budget is $100 million. It is being shot at Sinicida Studios in Rome with additional filming in Graina, in Pulia, and other locations across southern Italy.
Lion's Gate is distributing. Production has been underway since October 2025, and the film is being positioned as one of the most ambitious religious productions ever attempted. Whether Gibson drew directly from Ethiopian sources or arrived at a strikingly similar vision through his own decades of engagement with Catholic mysticism and apocryphal tradition, the convergence [music] cannot be dismissed.
The ascension of Isaiah describes Christ moving through seven heavens. The book of Enoch portrays the son of man as a being of blazing light presiding over a cosmic courtroom. Ethiopian theology understands the resurrection not as a single historical moment, but as a rupture that reverberates through every dimension of existence.
These are the same ideas Gibson has described in interview after interview. The original Passion of the Christ earned over $612 million worldwide on a $30 million budget. It held the record as the highest grossing rated film in American domestic box office history for nearly 20 years until Deadpool and Wolverine surpassed it in 2024.
If the sequel generates even a fraction of that cultural impact, it will introduce billions of people to a vision of Christ that has been kept in the margins for more than a millennium. But here is the question that sits underneath all of it. the one that refuses to go away no matter how many councils are convened or how many cannons are standardized.
I mean, we got a pope that brought a a South American idol into [clears throat] the church to worship. Really? He did.
The patcham mama. Why would he do that? If one version of the story could be suppressed so thoroughly that billions of people live their entire lives without ever knowing it existed.
What else has been edited out of the history you were taught? What other texts sit in cliffside monasteries guarded by men who have given their lives to preserve them? What other traditions carry truths that were too inconvenient, too destabilizing, too powerful for institutions to allow into the public view?
The Ethiopian monks who copied these manuscripts never imagined that a Hollywood filmmaker would one day echo their vision on screens across the world. They never knew scholars would rediscover their texts and the conversation would finally reach a global audience. They simply copied.
They prayed and they trusted that the truth they were preserving was worth more than their own comfort, their own health, their own lives. For nearly 1,700 years, they were right. And if you want to keep following the stories that history tried to bury, the ones that force you to question the gap between what you were taught and what actually happened, subscribe to Stone and Bone, because what we've uncovered today is only the beginning.
In 1947, a teenager threw a rock into a cave and accidentally proved that a forbidden text was ancient scripture. For 1500 years, anonymous Ethiopian monks climbed cliffs by rope, copied manuscripts by candle light, and protected texts they believed were sacred. And for 20 years, a Hollywood filmmaker wrestled with how to portray a vision so vast and strange that he warned audiences it might feel like an acid trip.
They're all connected. [music] Different centuries, different continents, same cosmic Christ. The radical vision Mel Gibson is bringing to theaters in 2027 isn't new.
It's the original Christian vision, the one that existed before councils and creeds, before political power reshaped theology into something manageable. It's been waiting in mountain monasteries, carved into cliff-faced churches, preserved in a language most of the world can't read. And maybe, just maybe, it's been waiting for this moment.
Not because the 21st century is more enlightened, but because after two millennia of revision and simplification, enough people are finally asking the question. If the image of Christ could be so thoroughly rewritten that billions never knew the original existed, what else have we been told that isn't true? This isn't about proving one version of Christianity right and another wrong.
It's about understanding that sacred traditions are choices, human choices made by people with power, with priorities, with political pressures we can't fully reconstruct. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church made different choices. They preserved different texts.
And because of their isolation, their devotion, and their [music] refusal to let go of what they'd been given, we now have access to a vision of Christ that was nearly erased. In 2027, when you sit in a dark theater and watch Jesus move through dimensions that don't obey the rules of time or space, remember what you're seeing isn't Hollywood fantasy. It's not Mel Gibson's invention.
It's 1700 years old. It's been waiting [music] and it's finally coming back. If this video made you question what else you've been told about history, about faith, about the origins of belief itself, subscribe to Stone and Bone.
We're going deeper. [music] We're asking the questions institutions don't want you to ask and we're just getting started. Let me know in the comments.
Did you know about the Ethiopian Bible before [music] this video? And would you watch Mel Gibson's resurrection film when it releases in theaters? The monks who preserved these texts didn't do it for fame.
They did it because they believed truth [music] was worth protecting. Maybe they were right. Maybe it still is.