It’s almost like symmetrical features are a thing universal to most animals. Including humans.
Also that first photo has different shaped eyebrows.
They're nowhere near similar, partially because you're not a Jew, partially because you're a domestically abused heroin addict
The first photo has closer eyebrows, but we all 3 have identical arches, which I know is harder for you guys to see with my bangs, but you can see it in the other photo of Marshall and I standing together that I posted.
Not everyone has symmetrical features. Some people have a letter "T" line up, often with a longer nose. Some people have their features more scrunched like a kitten face.
The main thing too is the shape of the eyes under the eyebrows too, the way it rounds at the edges and the shape of our eyes. Cheekbones and distance between cheekbones and jaw. All these things, look closer. It's not about how much makeup.
@TamarYaelBatYah Please post feet pics and full body shots.
Maybe. Might make Marshall too jealous?
Yeshia was telling everyone to do these things, Victim and Sinner alike.
WRONG. A victim owes nothing, absolutely nothing to the Sinner.
If person A is walking down the street and person B throws a rock at their head, does person A owe something to person B? Absolutely not!
If person A is injured in a car accident by person B does person A owe something to person? No, even a secular court would look at them like they are crazy for implying that. Person B owes person A damages.
Your thinking is corrupt, and against Hebraic ethics, to say the least
wouldn't forgiveness of the debt also be forgiveness of the sin
No, it's simply what one person owes to the other for sinning against them
For if you forgive other people when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive others their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins
Forgive them what? Their sin debt according to Numbers 5:5-8.
You're trying to make The Messiah into a false prophet. There is not one place in The Torah where anyone can forgive another human's sin. All sacrifices for sin were brought through the Temple door and laid on an altar, to make atonement for sin before Elohim. Not a single person had the power to forgive another's sin - not Moses, not priests, not prophets. No one but Elohim.