👓 Quick Take (16 Jan 2026): Few phrases sound more spiritual — or are more frequently misused — than “It’s under the blood.”In this session, William Abraham (@the7000vision) examines two closely linked theological distortions that repeatedly appear in abusive Christian systems: the “Under the Blood” heresy and the “Godly Legacy” defence. These errors do not reject grace outright.They misapply grace — collapsing forgiveness before God into immunity from earthly accountability, and using spiritual language to suppress truth, silence the harmed, and protect wrongdoing and its support structures. When harm begins to be told, the following pattern often unfolds: - repentance is declared, - forgiveness is invoked, and- truth-telling itself becomes the alleged sin. At that point, the focus shifts away from wrongdoing and onto the theology, obedience, and “spirit” of the one who speaks truth. That is not reconciliation -- It is theological inversion - Christian DARVO. This teaching draws a careful but firm biblical distinction between: - forgiveness and immunity, - grace and concealment, - repentance and performance (repentance rituals), - restoration and shortcut. Grace restores relationship with God. It does not erase history, forbid disclosure, dissolve responsibility, or abolish justice in time. 🔑 In this session you will examine: What the “Under the Blood” heresy actually is — and what Scripture never teaches. - Why forgiveness before God does not equal immunity from consequence - The difference between biblical repentance and repentance rituals - How repentance rituals provide appearance without repair - How theology is used to execute DARVO (deny, attack, reverse roles) - Why compelled silence can become false witness by omission - Why “godly legacy” has no biblical authority to override truth - Why good fruit does not cancel unresolved harm- How God redeems consequences through truth, not bypassing it - Why restoration is a promise — never a shortcut or entitlement ⏳ Timestamps 00:00 – Session Introduction: “Under the Blood” and Godly Legacy00:46 – Defining the “Under the Blood” Heresy02:08 – When Grace Is Used to Silence the Harmed03:45 – Forgiveness Does Not Require Silence05:14 – The Core Category Error: Atonement vs Accountability06:48 – David: Forgiven Before God, Accountable in Time08:22 – Walking in the Light Comes Before Cleansing09:58 – Why “Under the Blood” Cannot Mean Concealment11:31 – Godly Legacy as a Silencing Argument13:04 – Good Fruit Does Not Cancel Unresolved Sin14:58 – Repentance Rituals vs Biblical Repentance16:52 – When Repentance Avoids Truth and Consequence18:36 – How Repentance Rituals and “Under the Blood” Work Together20:21 – Theological DARVO: Deny, Attack, Reverse Roles22:18 – When the Blood Is Turned Into a Weapon24:05 – Justice, Restitution, and Lawful Remedy Are Not Unforgiveness25:49 – Accountability in Leadership and Ministry27:32 – Redemption of Consequences Through Repentance29:18 – Restoration Is a Promise, Not an Entitlement30:56 – Forgiveness Without Silence: A Clean Position32:41 – Summary Judgment and Closing Exhortation 📘 About This Session This teaching continues the Broken Altars series by addressing how spiritual language — forgiveness, grace, legacy, and blessing — can be distorted into mechanisms that preserve defiled systems long after harm has occurred. The blood of Christ is good news! But when it is used as a shield for offenders and a gag for the wounded, it becomes functional heresy — not because grace is false, but because grace has been corrupted. 📖 Scripture Focus 1 John 1, Isaiah 53,2 Samuel 12, Exodus 20, Exodus 22, Matthew 5, Matthew 7, Luke 8, Luke 12, Romans 12, Joel 22, Chronicles 7