The Remnant Awakens
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Shalom family. Welcome to another episode of The Remnant Awakens. I’m your brother, Pierre Lidji—Akan born, Hebrew by blood, son of Yahudah, and servant of the Most High Yahuah. As always, it’s an honor to journey with you as we uncover the truths that have been hidden for far too long. You know, it’s not just about information, but transformation—real transformation. Today, we’re gonna go deep. Really deep. Because we’re talking about something, something they don’t want you to love. Something they’ve twisted, rejected, and buried under centuries of lies and misunderstandings.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
You see, family, when we open the Scriptures, we’re not looking at someone else's story. This is our history, our legacy, our responsibility. It’s not just ancient text on a page, it’s the living Word of Yahuah, and it calls us to return to our identity. And trust me, this identity is powerful. It’s bold. It’s holy.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
But before we go any further, I want you to really open your heart for this one. Pray with me as we ask the Most High to guide this conversation. May His truth resonate within us deeply.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Let’s start here: the Torah is not religion. The Torah is not ‘Old Testament rules.’ And the Torah is not bondage. That’s what the church told you. That’s what religion wants you to believe. But what is the Torah, really? It is the instruction—the divine instruction—of the Most High. It is the way of life that Yahuah Himself spoke to His people. Family, it’s not about restriction; it’s about direction, a path to holiness, to righteousness.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Now, let’s be honest, many of us have been handed a version of Scripture that’s so diluted, so distorted, we don’t even recognize it anymore. They—the powers of this world—turned the Torah into a set of rules designed to condemn, to trap us in guilt. Why? Because if we see it as bondage, we’ll never embrace it as freedom. And the Torah, family, is freedom. It’s a covenant, not a cage. But religion? Religion doesn’t want you to know that. Religion wants you to stay lost, disconnected from Yahuah’s truth.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And family, let’s not forget, the Torah was never given as some afterthought, some temporary guideline till something ‘better’ came along. No. No, this is Yahuah’s eternal Word. It’s not obsolete, it’s absolute. And when we turn our hearts back to His instruction, we’re not just reading ancient laws—we’re stepping back into our identity, our purpose, our power.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
So ask yourself this: why would anyone want us to reject Yahuah’s Word? Why would they want us to see it as a burden instead of a blessing?
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Let me take you to the very beginning, family. In Genesis 3:1, the serpent said something—just a simple, almost innocent-sounding question—but it changed everything. He asked, ‘Did Yahuah really say...?’ You see, this wasn’t just about eating fruit from the tree of knowledge. No, no, this was a challenge to Yahuah’s authority, an attack on His Word. That’s the enemy’s strategy—always questioning, always trying to twist the divine instruction, to make us doubt what’s right and true.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And think about this: what’s the purpose of this tactic? It’s to separate us from Yahuah. The serpent didn’t attack Adam and Hawwah’s identity directly; he went after their relationship with the Most High. He knew that once you undermine the Word, once you get people to question its relevance or its authority, the foundation starts to crumble. Without the Torah—the instruction—how do we walk in holiness? How do we stay connected to Yahuah?
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And it didn’t stop there, family. Generation after generation, this spiritual assault has continued. The enemy works through systems, through ideologies, through religion, to distort the truth. Why? Because if we reject the Torah, we reject the covenant, we reject our identity. That’s the plan—to keep us disconnected, wandering, and powerless.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And you know, it’s interesting, because this strategy has shaped so much of what we’ve been taught about Scripture. Religion, colonialism, all these structures—they’ve taken this tactic and amplified it. They’ve painted the Torah as harsh, as irrelevant, as ‘old.’ They don’t want us to see it as a gift from the Creator Himself, as the very thing that sets us apart, that defines us as His people.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Family, if there’s one thing we need to understand about Yahusha Ha’Mashiach, it’s this: He didn’t come to abolish the Torah. Let that sink in for a moment. He didn’t come to erase it, rewrite it, or replace it. No, He came to fulfill it—to bring it to its fullness, not to cancel it.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Now, listen carefully, because I know some of you might be thinking, 'What does that even mean, Pierre?' Fulfill doesn’t mean ‘to end.’ It doesn’t mean to toss it aside like an old garment. In Hebrew thought, to fulfill means to live it out, to embody it perfectly. And that’s exactly what Yahusha did. In every word He spoke, every action He took, He was living the Torah, showing us exactly what it looks like to walk in Yahuah’s way.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Have you ever wondered why Yahusha’s teachings felt so radical? Why they seemed to challenge the religious leaders of His day? It wasn’t because He broke the Torah, no—far from it. It was because He exposed the hypocrisy of those who claimed to teach the Torah but didn’t live it. Yahusha upheld the Torah as righteous, holy, and good, but He called out those who twisted it to suit their own agendas.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And family, let’s be real—if we’re not careful, we can fall into that same trap. We can end up listening to interpretations that dilute the truth, that make us think the Torah is somehow obsolete. But Yahusha Himself said, ‘I did not come to destroy the Law or the Prophets.’ He declared that not even the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, would disappear from the Torah until all is accomplished.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
So let’s ask ourselves: if Yahusha upheld the Torah, if He lived it, if He taught it, why would we dare to reject it? Why would we think it no longer applies to us? Because, family, the truth is, Yahusha didn’t come to give us a new religion. No, He came to call us back to covenant, back to obedience, back to the Torah. And walking in the Torah isn’t about earning salvation—it’s about walking in alignment with Yahuah’s will, in the freedom that comes from living His way.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Let me tell you this loud and clear: the Torah is freedom. Not bondage. It’s liberation. Family, we’ve been told a lie—a dangerous, soul-crushing lie—that the Torah is some kind of burden, some relic of the past meant to weigh us down. But that’s the trap, you see? That’s the deception. Because if we believe the Torah is bondage, we’ll run from it instead of running toward it. And by rejecting the Torah, what are we really doing? We’re rejecting the foundation of freedom that Yahuah laid for us.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Now I know, I know some might say, ‘But Pierre, isn’t freedom about living without rules, about doing what we want?’ But family, think about this: what kind of freedom is that? Is it freedom when we’re wandering aimlessly, disconnected from the Creator, trapped in cycles of sin and destruction? Is it freedom when we’re out of alignment with the instructions Yahuah gave us for life, for holiness, for blessing?
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
You see, true freedom is not the absence of direction—it’s being on the right path. It’s walking in the way of Yahuah without fear, without guilt, knowing that you’re in covenant with the Most High. That’s what the Torah gives us, family. It’s not a prison; it’s a roadmap. A gift of grace that leads us out of darkness into His marvelous light. But religion doesn’t want you to see it that way. No, religion has disguised it as a chain, when in reality it’s a key to unlock the fullness of life Yahuah intended.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And don’t let them fool you—don’t let them make you believe that walking in the Torah means you’re trying to ‘work’ for salvation. Because salvation, family, has always been by grace. Always. From the very beginning. But grace doesn’t mean we reject the path Yahuah laid for us. Grace pulls us onto that path. Grace makes it possible for us to walk in obedience, to follow His instruction, not out of fear, but out of love. Out of gratitude. Out of reverence.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
So let me ask you this, family: what’s stopping you from embracing the Torah for what it really is? Who told you it was bondage? And more importantly—why did you believe them?
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Let’s talk about what the modern church says about the Torah, family. You see, they call it outdated. They call it irrelevant. They say it’s a burden no one needs to carry anymore. And honestly, when I hear this, I can’t help but wonder—why? Why do they push so hard against the very instruction that Yahuah gave to His people? Why do they treat it like it’s something to be avoided, to be dismissed, to be hated?
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Think about it—if the Torah is just a ‘set of rules,’ why does it strike such a nerve? Why do they feel such a strong need to preach against it, to label it as bondage? Family, there’s something deeper going on here. The modern church has bought into a doctrine that says grace and the Torah can’t coexist. That to live under grace means you have to reject the instruction of the Most High. But let me tell you—this doctrine does not come from Yahuah. It’s not rooted in Scripture. This is man’s idea, not Yahuah’s truth.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And when we start peeling back the layers, we see how fear plays into this narrative. Fear of accountability. Fear of the responsibility that comes with walking in truth. Because the Torah demands something from us, family. It requires us to live differently, to be set apart, to walk in righteousness. And that’s not comfortable for everyone. It’s much easier to call it legalism, to call it bondage, to call it a weight on the shoulders. It’s much easier to make it the enemy than to confront what rejecting it really means.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
But let’s be clear—the Torah isn’t the enemy. It’s not some opposing force to grace; it’s an extension of grace. It’s Yahuah saying, ‘Here’s how you live in My will. Here’s how you stay close to Me.’ See, the true enemy wants to divide us from Yahuah’s Word. He doesn’t want us to embrace His instruction, because when we do, we walk in covenant, we walk in power, and we step into our true identity.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And that’s what the modern church doesn’t want to deal with, family. They don’t want to admit that rejecting the Torah isn’t grace—it’s rebellion. It’s choosing man’s tradition over Yahuah’s truth. So we’ve got to ask ourselves: are we listening to the Word of Yahuah, or the word of man? Who are we really following?
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Family, let’s make this plain: when you return to the Torah, you’re not just following a set of rules. You’re returning to Yahuah Himself. You’re stepping back into covenant, into the divine relationship He designed for us from the very beginning. And that covenant is sacred, it’s binding, it’s eternal. It’s not something we can redefine or negotiate on our terms.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
You see, the Torah isn’t just about what we do—it’s about who we are. It’s about identity. It’s about belonging to Yahuah as His set-apart people. And when we abandon the Torah, we’re essentially saying, ‘Yahuah, I don’t need Your instruction. I don’t need Your guidance.’ But is that really freedom? Or is it just separation disguised as independence? Because the truth is, when we walk away from the Torah, we walk away from the covenant.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And here’s the beauty of returning, family. Yahuah is merciful. He’s patient. He’s been waiting for us to realize that the road we’ve been on is leading us away from Him, not toward Him. When we turn back—when we choose repentance, when we choose to align ourselves with His instruction—it’s like coming home. It’s restoration. It’s reconciliation. It’s stepping back into His promises.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
But let me tell you, family, this isn’t just about us as individuals. When we return to Torah, we reclaim something much bigger. We restore our place as a people, as a nation, as the remnant that Yahuah has called out for His purpose. We’re no longer scattered, no longer lost, no longer wandering in the wilderness of false doctrine and man-made traditions. We become rooted, anchored, in the truth. We become part of something eternal, something unshakable.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
So, ask yourself: what are you holding onto that’s keeping you from returning to Torah? What fear, what doubt, what lie has convinced you that covenant living is too hard, too restrictive? Because the only thing standing between you and restoration is a choice. A choice to return. A choice to say, ‘Yahuah, I’m ready. I’m ready to follow Your way.’
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Family, this awakening, this journey we’ve been on—it isn’t about emotions. It’s not about hype or fleeting feelings. No, it’s deeper than that. It’s about truth. The kind of truth that redeems, the kind that restores, and the kind that reveals the purpose Yahuah has for His people. This isn’t fiction, it’s not theory—it’s reality. The Torah was never abolished. Never destroyed. It was hidden. But now, family, now we are seeing it restored. We are seeing Yahuah’s Word come alive in ways that no system, no lie, no enemy can suppress.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And if you, right now, are tired of the lies, if your spirit is restless, if you feel this longing for something ancient, something sacred, let me tell you—you are not alone. You’re being called back. Back to the ancient path, the narrow way, the covenant that the Most High established long before this world tried to rewrite the truth.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
So, here’s what I’ll leave you with: until we gather again, pick up the Word. Read Deuteronomy. Pray Psalm 119. Let the Ruach Hakodesh—the Spirit of Yahuah—guide you back into His truth. Don’t rush past this moment, family. These words have life. These prayers have power. And the Word of Yahuah will never return void. It will achieve what He sent it to accomplish. I’m Pierre Lidji, and this? This has been The Remnant Awakens. Thank you for walking this journey with me. Shalom, family. Shalom. See you on the next episode!.
Chapters (8)
About the podcast
The Remnant Awakens is a powerful prophetic truth podcast hosted by Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji, a 25-year-old Hebrew descendant from the tribe of Yahudah, lineage of Shem, son of Noach. This 62-episode series ignites the hearts of the 12 tribes of Yashar’el and grafted-in believers by revealing the true identity of the Hebrews, exposing religious deception, unpacking Scripture with power, and preparing the remnant for the Second Exodus and the return of the King. Stay tuned!
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