TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

How Eminem & D12 Sold Their Souls For Fame - Theo's Story

1h 33m 51s14,519 mots2,080 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

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I began to get deeply entrenched in the

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growing Detroit hiphop scene, the scene

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that brought you Eminem and D12 and Jay

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Dilla. I was in that scene. I knew all

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of those people. And it was really

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through the confession of a late rapper

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uh named Proof who I think uh risked his

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life to tell his comrades in the Detroit

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hip-hop community that these record

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labels take you to a ritual to pray over

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your master tape. Not long after that,

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he was uh shot and killed on 8 mile

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road. They were all invited to a meeting

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in a big skyscraper. There is no 13 on

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the keypad. The whole group got on the

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elevator. Proof said when they got past

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floor number 12, the manager stuck a key

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in the keypad and turned it. That's the

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floor where the devil does his business.

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We have our own floor dedicated to our

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Luciferian business. They get off on

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this 13th floor. And as the doors open,

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>> hi, welcome to Touching the Afterlife.

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Let me tell you, you are in for a treat

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today. We have brother Theo who came

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right out of the hiphop Detroit scene.

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We're going to be hearing many things

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such as the ritual that's behind the

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successful artist and what really

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happens on the 13th floor.

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First and foremost, I like to let people

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know upfront um that I was not raised as

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a Christian because I think a lot of

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times

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there's an assumption, especially among

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young believers and non-believers who

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have not found the Lord yet. There

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there's this um stigma that they

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put on a lot of folks, especially black

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folks, that uh you was raised up in the

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black church. You were inundated with

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Jesus. You've been mind controlled and

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brainwashed in the white man's religion

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has you uh mindled and you don't know

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what you're doing. So you're just

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following something that really comes

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from Horus from ancient Egypt or it's

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something that comes from ancient Suma

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or even older than that or you know that

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there there's all of these ideas that I

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used to believe and um it it's what made

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it hard for me to submit to the idea of

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the Bible or Jesus Christ or any of

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that. Um, I came from a very, I guess

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what you would call a progressively

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liberal household, somewhat a black

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militant household.

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Um, where those types of ideas, although

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my mother never pushed anything on me,

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it was the lack of pushing something on

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me that allowed for me to not have any

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structure and to kind of go my own way

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like Fleetwood Mack. And so I

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sought after some sort of u religious

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idea from the time I was a little boy.

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When I was a little boy, I remember

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asking her um because I pulled up on the

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kitchen table to see what she was

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cooking. I could smell this the food

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cooking. I was about 5 years old and I

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pulled up on the table and I looked and

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I saw it was a can of red devil ham on

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the on the kitchen table and I just

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remember thinking as a little boy, wow,

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is it a god? And it is it is it a devil?

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And I let myself back down. I said,

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"Mama," I said, "Is it a such thing as

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God or the devil?" And I remember she

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she was like kind of startled as she was

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cooking. And she turned around and

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looked at me and she said, "You know, I

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don't know, but you should try to find

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out for yourself."

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And that kind of sent me on my journey.

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So to make a long story less long, um

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the era that I was a teenager in, which

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is the time unfortunately when we get a

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lot of our ideas and when we start to

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think that we understand the world, but

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the time that I was a teenager in I

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graduated on time in 1991,

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but it it was an era of hiphop that was

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very dominant

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um or a or a genre within the genre of

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hip-hop, a subgenre of hip-hop that was

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very very dominant called um conscious

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rap today. They used to call it

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knowledge rap. Some people called it pro

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black rap, but it was

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um knowledge rap is what folks generally

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would call it, but it was um a movement

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from out of New York primarily

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um that had a lot to do with a former

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cult leader, Dr. New York

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who was very influential in Brooklyn at

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the time and had a lot of influence over

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a lot of the main MC's.

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And so, you know, myself being a young

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guy and being influenced by where pop

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culture was taking me as a youngster,

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um, I gravitated toward that. And of

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course also it kind of fell in line with

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the lack of spiritual discipline that I

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had or with the um militant and black

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history understanding that I did have.

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And so I really gravitated toward that.

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And it was around that time in my life I

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believe that I made some sort of

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conscious decision having some degree of

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um regency over myself at that time. And

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I guess you could say I was past the age

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of accountability. I began to make a

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free will choice that I wanted to be a

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part of Islam or uh what my favorite

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rappers were into. Rock him, Cool Gi

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Rap, Big Daddy Kane, these were all guys

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that were either members of the Nation

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of Islam or members of an offshoot of

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the Nation of Islam called the 5%

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Nation. And so I began to um at at age

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18, I proclaimed to my mother, I'm going

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to go, ma, I'm I'm about to join the

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Nation of Islam. And she just looked at

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me, she said, "Okay."

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And so, um, I started studying with the

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Nation of Islam, going to mosque number

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one, Detroit. It is actually the uh

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place where Elijah Muhammad came and

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claimed that he found a god in the form

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of a European man named Far Muhammad and

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he established the first Nation of Islam

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temple in Detroit. And so that's where I

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went. I went to mosque number one.

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That's why it's called mosque number

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one. Um and immediately in going there I

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saw that the way things were portrayed

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much like you find with religion in in

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in general no matter what religion that

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you name the people who are a part of it

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usually portray

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and display the very best parts of it.

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And so um that's what I was hearing on

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record was was I guess what you would

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call the very best parts of it. But what

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I saw in actual practical application

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when I went there didn't match up and a

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lot of things didn't make sense. And I

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remember asking some questions that

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couldn't get answered. And so I didn't

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spend much time there. I went looking

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for something deeper. And I think

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through having some conversations with

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other young people who had as much lack

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of wisdom and um

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pride as I did, you know, they who who

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also, you know, had this inherent

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antichrist spirit from listening to the

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music and following the pop culture at

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the time. Um, and I found out, well,

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Nation of Islam, that's one form of

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Islam or or one form of of uh

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but if you really want to

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be a Muslim, you need to deal with um

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Sunni Muslims. That's that's what I was

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told by a friend of mine at Rapt. And so

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I went to the mosque with him and I just

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began this journey. Um, again, you know,

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I found fault with that, uh, not

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understanding Arabic and feeling like,

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okay, well, we're we're we're still like

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strangers in a strange land in this

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mosque full of people who are from the

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Middle East. And so, I felt out of place

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there. And I was always looking for this

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place. I was always looking for God. Um,

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and I I followed the breadcrumbs that

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this world lays out for you if you come

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from where I come from. Um, but in

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general, you know, because the devil is

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the prince of this world, he has

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structured things a particular way where

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if you don't raise up a child in the way

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they shall go, they're going to go his

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way. And there's a lot of different

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versions of his way. And so the version

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of his way that I ended up deeply

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entrenched in because of my searching

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was anything but Christ. Anything but

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the Bible. The Bible is a book. You

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know, mankind has has written and

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