The Kensington Runestone, Templar Treasure, and the Green Jar
Basement #006: Scott Wolter
D25
Let me start by saying I absolutely love The Why Files. It’s the best channel on YouTube for this kind of content, period. I’ve watched every video on the channel, and I always look forward to the next episode.
I also enjoy the Basement interviews. It’s nice to hear directly from the people themselves and get their perspectives.
Your first thought might be, “Well, I can see why he doesn’t agree with this information — he’s a Christian.” But I’m simply going by what I know is written in the Bible. I’m not closed-minded; honestly, I don’t think you would even watch The Why Files if you were.
I do believe there is a great deception coming soon. Lately, the alien agenda seems to be pushed more and more. The Bible speaks about a deception so great that even the elect could be deceived. Remember, Satan is called the great deceiver and the father of lies. Who’s to say he couldn’t somehow set something like this up as part of a deception?
I’m not against hearing alternative viewpoints, but we all need to stay on guard. The problem is that if you don’t read the Bible yourself, it can be easy to get persuaded into another viewpoint or deception.
Responding to the Scott Wolter “Green Jar Scroll” Video
1. First Impressions
I recently watched a long interview with Scott Wolter, a forensic geologist, who claims to have deciphered a mysterious scroll found in a green jar. According to the video, the scroll is allegedly from Yeshua (Jesus) and contains a hidden history of humanity, the Templars, Freemasons, and prophecies for the future, including a date: June 6, 2026, at 6 PM.
The video was fascinating and filled with dramatic claims: Jesus not being entirely human, surviving the crucifixion, traveling to Europe with Mary Magdalene, having children, and leaving prophecies that supposedly include a clone rising on the third day after death. Naturally, watching this long video left me with a mix of curiosity, skepticism, and questions about what the message truly means.
2. The “Not Entirely Human” Claim
One of the most striking claims in the video was that Yeshua is “not entirely human” and comes from Arcturus. This suggests an extraterrestrial element to Jesus, blending biblical history with a sci-fi concept. While intriguing as a story, there’s no historical or biblical evidence to support this claim.
Even if one were to entertain the idea that a divine being might communicate knowledge for future generations, the video’s use of modern terminology, like “clone,” raises serious questions. The word “clone” didn’t exist in ancient times, making it extremely unlikely that any first-century writing would include it.
3. Surviving the Crucifixion and Traveling to Europe
The video claims Jesus slowed his breathing, survived the crucifixion, and was hidden in a family tomb until healing. He allegedly then traveled with Mary Magdalene to France, Scotland, and the Isle of Iona, having two children along the way.
These ideas are consistent with modern speculative theories that have been circulating for decades, popularized in books like The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail and The Da Vinci Code. While it’s fascinating as a narrative, there’s no historical evidence that Jesus left the Middle East after the crucifixion, and the Bible does not mention children or European travels.
4. The June 6, 2026, Prophecy and Clone Concept
The scroll allegedly predicts a return on June 6, 2026, at 6 PM and warns of a clone rising on the third day after death. This seems designed to create suspense and urgency.
From a biblical perspective, no scripture gives a precise date for Jesus’ return (Matthew 24:36). The mention of a clone is anachronistic, meaning it is a modern concept impossible for an ancient scroll to reference. Even if a divine being wanted humans to understand something in our time, most biblical prophecies use symbolic imagery, not technical modern terminology.
5. Mixing Biblical Text with Modern Science Fiction
The video mixes a lot of elements: angels, advanced beings, evolution, extraterrestrial origins, Freemasons, Templars, and secret prophecies. While this creates a compelling story, it also makes the narrative hard to verify. Historically, biblical prophecies use imagery that people of the time could understand — beasts, horns, kingdoms, stars — rather than modern science or technology terms.
It seems this narrative is more a modern constructed story than an ancient text discovered and decoded. The “green jar” scroll may be a creative attempt to weave together multiple myths and theories.
6. Connections to the Antichrist and End Times
I also reflected on connections to prophecy, like the Antichrist and the seven-year tribulation. Some elements — someone dying and rising again, false prophets, deception — seem inspired by Revelation 13. The video mixes these ideas with modern predictions (June 6, 2026) and advanced technology (clone), creating a hybrid of biblical prophecy, science fiction, and conspiracy theories.
It’s understandable to wonder if this ties to the Antichrist narrative, but historically, the Bible doesn’t describe an exact human or clone fulfilling these modern interpretations.
7. Personal Reflection and Skepticism
Watching this video and thinking about it, I feel both intrigued and cautious. There’s a natural human desire to uncover hidden truth, especially with topics as mysterious and spiritually significant as Jesus, prophecy, and secret societies.
At the same time, it’s important to separate:
Evidence-based history
Scriptural interpretation
Modern speculation
This story is compelling and creative, but without archaeological, linguistic, or historical validation, it should be treated as modern storytelling inspired by ancient themes, not a literal discovery.
8. Conclusion
The Scott Wolter video is thought-provoking. It challenges viewers to think about hidden histories, prophecy, and the mysteries of humanity. While it’s tempting to take it as literal truth, historical and linguistic analysis suggests the story is modern, symbolic, and speculative.
Even so, exploring these ideas can be valuable — it encourages us to ask questions, research carefully, and reflect on faith, history, and truth.
Ultimately, the video is a story, and like any story, it’s up to each viewer to consider what resonates, what can be verified, and what should be approached with caution.
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