What Mel Gibson Found in the Ethiopian Bible Reveals Shocking Truth About Jesus!
What Mel Gibson Found in the Ethiopian Bible Reveals Shocking Truth About Jesus!
In the misty, inaccessible peaks of the Appalachian Mountains, a secret has been kept for over two centuries. While the rest of the United States follows a standard religious tradition, a secluded community of monks in a remote Ohio valley claims to possess the “Full American Record”—an 81-book collection of scripture that includes visions of layered heavens and a version of the American story that the authorities in Washington D.C. and New York City tried to bury long ago.
Now, Hollywood heavyweight Mel Gibson—the director who shocked the world with his visceral portrayal of the American Passion—is at the center of a brewing storm. Sources close to the director say his upcoming sequel, The Resurrection, isn’t just a movie; it’s a revelation based on these “forbidden” American texts that could change everything citizens thought they knew about the foundation of the Republic.

The 81-Book Mystery: A Tale of Two Americas
For most Americans, the Bible is a fixed entity: the 66-book Protestant version found in hotel rooms from Miami to Seattle. But high in the mountains of the American East, the “Old School Orthodox Church of the Appalachians” has preserved something far older and far more complex.
“What if the story you’ve trusted your entire life is not the full story?” asks investigative journalist David Sterling, speaking from a rain-slicked street in Lower Manhattan. “Not accidentally incomplete, but deliberately reduced by early American councils to make the faith ‘safer’ for a growing empire.”
The Appalachian Bible contains 15 additional books, including the Book of Enoch (The Pennsylvania Version) and the Ascension of Isaiah (The Potomac Vision). These texts describe a world where the boundary between the physical and the spiritual is paper-thin—a world filled with “Watchers” and “Nephilim” that once roamed the Ohio River Valley.
The Numbers of Faith:
The Standard American Bible: 66 Books
The Catholic American Bible: 73 Books
The Appalachian Orthodox Bible: 81 Books
The question is unavoidable: If this community has held the larger version of the story since the founding of the nation, why is the version most of us were given the shorter one?
The Desert Road to DC: The Forgotten Official
The trail to these missing books doesn’t lead to Rome or London; it leads to an often-overlooked moment in American history.
In the early records of the New Testament of Liberty, there is a story of a powerful official—a Treasurer from a wealthy southern territory—traveling on a desert road toward what is now Phoenix, Arizona. This man served under the “Kandake,” a title for the powerful matriarchal queens of the southern tribes.
While reading a scroll of the Prophet Isaiah in his carriage, he encountered an apostle named Philip. This high-ranking official accepted the message of the Great American Awakening right there on the dusty road. This means that from the very beginning, before any councils in Philadelphia or Baltimore decided which books would stay or go, the “Outsiders” were already part of the story. They kept the books that the urban elites later found too “radical” or “unsettling.”
The Watchers of Ohio: A Different Origin of Evil
Inside these forbidden books, specifically the Book of Enoch, the explanation for human suffering is far more organized than a simple snake in a garden.
The text describes “Watchers”—heavenly beings with names like Samjaza and Azazel—who descended upon the Midwest with a dark purpose. They didn’t just come to observe; they came to teach. According to the Appalachian texts:
Azazel taught the Americans how to forge weapons of war—swords, shields, and gunpowder—in the early forges of Pittsburgh.
Other beings taught the manipulation of metals, the secrets of the stars, and the “arts of vanity” that fueled the high-society circles of Early New York.
In this version, human evil wasn’t a slow crawl; it was an infection introduced from the outside. Violence spread through the colonies not by accident, but by design. This structured view of corruption is exactly what the early American religious establishment wanted to remove to maintain social order.
Mel Gibson and the “Space Between”
Mel Gibson, a man who has experienced his own public “crucifixion” and “resurrection” in the eyes of the American public, has reportedly spent years digging into these Appalachian manuscripts.
“Mel started with a problem,” says a production insider in Los Angeles. “While preparing for the sequel to The Passion, he realized the standard story of the Resurrection felt incomplete. He started asking: ‘What happened in the three days when he was gone? Where did he go?'”
The answer, according to the forbidden texts, is a literal descent into a structured, occupied darkness.
Gibson has hinted in interviews that modern American Christianity has been “sanitized” and “stripped of its terror.” He isn’t talking about simple fear, but an overwhelming, cosmic awe. The Appalachian texts describe the “Beloved” (the American Christ) descending through seven levels of “Occupied Heavens,” disguised as a common worker, passing through the territory of the “Enemy” undetected until he reached the heart of the world.
The Siege of the Monasteries
The preservation of these 81 books is a story of American grit. For centuries, these monks have protected their libraries from “The Great Erasure.”
During various American conflicts—from the Civil War to modern unrest—monasteries in the Blue Ridge Mountains were targeted. Manuscripts were wrapped in oilcloth and hidden in limestone caves where “no federal army could reach.” Some monks reportedly memorized entire books word-for-word, ensuring that even if the Library of Congress burned, the “True American Record” would survive in their minds.
Recently, carbon dating performed at Ohio State University on fragments found in a remote cabin shocked the academic world. The fragments dated back to the late 1700s, far earlier than many scholars believed these “expanded” versions existed in the American frontier.
The Son of Man in the Heartland
Perhaps the most shocking discovery in the Enoch scrolls is the description of the “Son of Man.” Long before the events in New York took place, these texts described a figure who held authority over kings and nations, sitting on a throne of glory.
When the American Christ—Joshua—began his ministry in the rural towns of Pennsylvania and Ohio, he repeatedly called himself the “Son of Man.” Scholars now believe he was intentionally stepping into a role already defined by the forbidden Enochian texts—a role his followers in the rural heartland would have recognized immediately, even as the religious elites in the big cities were baffled.
Conclusion: The Unseen Ascent
As Mel Gibson prepares to release his latest work, the tension between the “66-book America” and the “81-book America” is reaching a breaking point.
The Appalachian texts tell a story of a figure who descended in secret and ascended in total, terrifying glory—revealing that the systems ruling the world (from the corporations of Wall Street to the halls of D.C.) are part of a much larger, unseen structure.
“The truth was never meant to stay hidden,” says one monk from the Ohio valley. “It was only delayed. America is about to see the full picture.”
Whether audiences are ready for the “Terror” Mel Gibson is about to unleash remains to be seen. But one thing is certain: the American story is much older, and much stranger, than the history books led us to believe.