Exposing The Hebrew Israelite’s False Gospel!

If you’ve ever scrolled through TikTok or YouTube, you’ve probably seen the guys in purple — the IUIC, led by Bishop Nathanyel. Many in the apologetics community jokingly call them the “Purple Rangers.”

Their matching uniforms are their trademark, and their message has been the same for years: twisting Scripture to fit a racial narrative that isn’t Biblical.

These groups keep spreading the same false teachings year after year. You could easily trace a timeline of them repeating the same claims, even after others have refuted their arguments again and again.

That persistence shows something deeper: a cult-like devotion to ideology over truth.

An image of IUIC members.The Arrogance Behind the Message

As Maverick mentioned in our conversation, there’s a kind of arrogance that often comes from people in this movement.

He said something that stuck with me — that they can sometimes seem more arrogant than the average Muslim apologist. And honestly, from what I’ve seen, he’s right.

They take pride in their identity and outward appearance. The color purple—Biblically associated with royalty and wealth—is one of their trademarks, yet they’ve missed its true meaning.

Instead of wearing it as a sign of humility before Christ, they use it to project superiority.

What makes it ironic is that they claim to represent God’s chosen people while using pride to elevate themselves above others — something the gospel of Jesus Christ completely opposes.

An image of Bishop Nathanyel of the IUIC.A Twisted Use of Scripture

In one of Bishop Nathanyel’s videos, he reads Galatians 1:6, where Paul warns the church about turning to “another gospel.”

But instead of using this passage to point people back to the true gospel, he uses it to claim that Western Christians are following a “White Man’s Gospel” because Jesus is depicted as Caucasian.

 “I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel:
Which is not another; but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ.” – Galatians 1:6–7

They argue that because Revelation 1 describes Jesus with “hair white like wool” and “skin like brass burned in a furnace,” that means He was Black.

From there, they build their entire theology — their version of the gospel — on ethnicity and skin tone.

But what they completely miss is that Revelation 1 isn’t describing race. It’s a glorious, symbolic vision of the resurrected Christ, showing His purity, holiness, and divine majesty — not His melanin level.

“His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire; And his feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in a furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters.” – Revelation 1:14–15

An image of clenched fists with different skin tones.The Danger of a Color-Based Gospel

It’s true that Jesus was a Hebrew man from the Middle East — a brown-skinned Jew. But claiming that His skin color defines the gospel is a serious mistake.

When someone asks, “Who is God?” and the first answer is “a Black man,” the focus has already shifted. That’s no longer the gospel of grace. It becomes a gospel of race.

This isn’t just an error. It’s idolatry disguised as identity.

The real tragedy is that their teaching replaces the universal message of salvation with one that divides people. It lifts one group above another.

It’s no longer about redemption but about revenge, resentment, and racial superiority.

An image of IUIC members.Confronting the False Narrative

Maverick made a powerful observation during our conversation — that these teachings sound more like Black supremacy than Biblical Christianity.

And when you listen closely, that’s exactly what it is: a repackaged, racialized version of the gospel that divides rather than unites.

They twist history itself, especially when they talk about the transatlantic slave trade. They ignore the fact that slavery wasn’t a one-sided European plot.

Long before Europeans arrived, Africans were already selling other Africans into slavery. This truth doesn’t excuse anyone’s sin, but it completely shatters the selective storytelling that supports their ideology.

The IUIC and groups like it have built an entire movement on resentment, not repentance — and on race, not righteousness.

Their “gospel” appeals to those wounded by history, but it cannot save anyone. Only Jesus — the real Jesus, not a racial version of Him — offers salvation and unity in truth.

If you want to see a deeper breakdown of how this false gospel is exposed, watch my full video here.

In this livestream, I go into the Scriptural errors behind Bishop Nathanyel’s teachings and show how the Word of God dismantles the Hebrew Israelite’s false claims line by line.

May every believer stand firm in truth and never be ashamed of the true gospel of Christ.

WATCH THE VIDEO

Israel

He’s learning to serve the Christian community better and better each day through his teaching on the Bible (both theory and practical application for everyday life). Israel Ikhinmwin loves to share the truth of God’s Word and be an example for other Christians looking to develop your faith.

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