
Bartie Musa Commentary: What prompted this article was a sincere inquiry from an individual who wanted to know why Yahawah (God) allowed certain sins to exist even when he’s in control of everything. In particular, what purpose would there be for Yahawah allowing the wicked and demonic evil of say child rape to proliferate instead of having the angels save the children or preventing it from happening all together. What they were asking is an age old question The Problem of Evil. How or why would a just, merciful, and good god allow evil to take place? That is the question we will be answering in this 3 part ANIMA Framework series entitled “The Problem of Evil”.
In part 1 of this series we’re going to lay the ground work, and understand the balance of Yahawah and why evil had to exist. Evil in this case is a tool of contrast and a balancing agent to eternal good. To fully understand why evil had to exist is to put it this way. Without evil, you would not truly be able to appreciate the good. This is the reason why Adam fell, not because he was wicked necessarily, but because he was naive. Yahawah set up Adam for failure, just so he could later be redeemed as Christ Yahawashi. Had Adam just been perfect from the beginning, and never knew a bad day in his life, it would cancel out the Messiah, hope, redemption, endurance, and appreciation of the good.
This actually answers one question many people ask… why did God put the serpent and the fruit in the garden of Eden. The answer to that is because Adam was set up so that he could be refined over generations and ultimately perfected in Christ Yahawashi. Adam didn’t know evil, but he learned it the hard way. This enables Yahawashi (the 2nd Adam) to fully appreciate the Goodness of the kingdom, knowing all the evil and hell we’ve gone through to get there. Now in this series we will also be touching on free will, because that is an important factor in the problem of evil. We have “solved” the conundrum of free will in the face of Yahawah’s sovereign authorship of reality. The long story short of this is, perspective and dimensionality. Yes Yahawah knows the end from the beginning, and knows what you will ultimately do. But you do not, and so as your life unfolds, all of your good and all of your evils are experienced and conducting organically from your perspective. This is why when you do face judgement you ultimately are judged based on your choices, because while Yahawah knew your story, you still made and experienced those choices. You’re judged from the human perspective, the experience of your free will is what makes you eligible for moral judgement despite divine authorship.
Lastly the reincarnation piece, if we are truly to understand judgement and evil, even in the case of children. You have to understand regeneration and that we come back every 3-4 generations after our death through a male descendant. So the “child” who is being tortured, could of been the torturer in the past life. We don’t know these things from our perspective, but Yahawah does. This ensure generational and national (racial) accountability) across time. Now this does not mean every child facing judgement “deserves” it or did something bad, sometimes truly innocent children are victims for the narrative sake. Because without the tragedy, the eternal peace, safety, and goodness of the kingdom could not be fully appreciated. So in those cases the evil that child suffers is part of the greater good that will ultimately come.
Now to wrap up this preamble we can say it like this. Evil exists to balance the good. And here is the balance, evil exists temporarily (Earth is only 6,000 years old and upon Yahawashi’s return there’s a 1,000 year sabbath), and the temporary nature of evil during this first 7,000 year cycle of humanity will culminate and end with the final judgement of Esau Edom (the man of sin and proliferator and accommodator of evil), after that eternal goodness and righteousness will follow in the kingdom of Yahawah bahasham Yahawashi. That’s the balance temporary evil, to counterbalance eternal good. Without this the kingdom would lose meaning, but with the juxtaposition of evil and Babylon being a monument (never inhabited again) even in year 1,324,545 of the Kingdom we will still appreciate the goodness, the peace…because we would have remembered and experienced the evil.
I know that was long winded, but let’s get straight into the analysis, this is a deep question that requires us to really dive into. LORD willing this is edifying and interesting, Yahawah bahasham Yahawashi has truly revealed to us great understanding in these last days.




anima framework: rooted in yahawah’s truth
THE BALANCE OF YAHAWAH: Why Evil Had to Exist
ANIMA Framework Analysis
⚖️🔥 THE BALANCE OF YAHAWAH: Why Evil Had to Exist
🪧 Intro: Evil Is Not an Accident — It Was Decreed
When we observe the world around us—wars, child exploitation, injustice, bloodshed—it feels almost impossible to reconcile the existence of a sovereign God with this level of suffering. This is not a philosophical parlor trick. This is real. Real evil. Real agony.
But here’s what the scriptures say:
“I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.”
— Isaiah 45:7
The Most High Yahawah did not merely permit evil—He created it. Not to glorify it. Not to excuse it. But to use it.
To teach. To balance. To ultimately reveal the full contrast of His eternal glory.
Today, we break down the full divine logic behind the temporary role of evil in Yahawah’s prophetic plan, and why its abolishment—not its coexistence—proves His perfection.
⚖️ 1. A Just Balance: Temporary Evil vs Eternal Good
“A false balance is abomination to the LORD: but a just weight is his delight.”
— Proverbs 11:1
Evil was never meant to last forever. It was written in as a temporary phase in the timeline of human and prophetic development.
A short chapter… in an eternal book.
Had good always existed without its opposite, it would become mundane. Meaningless. Righteousness would have no resistance, no cost, no value.
So Yahawah, in His perfect justice, created a “just balance”:
- 🌑 Temporary Evil — pain, injustice, suffering, bloodshed
- 🌕 Eternal Good — restoration, peace, righteousness, immortality
Evil had to run its course to teach creation why it must never return.
🍎👁️ 2. Adam, Naivety, and the Necessity of the Fall
The Garden was not Heaven. Adam was not perfect. He was… innocent—but naive.
He had not yet encountered evil. Therefore, he had no knowledge of its contrast. Yahawah allowed the serpent (Satan) to tempt Eve, initiating the fall of man.
But that fall set off the most important sequence in the entire human story:
Adam falls → Sin enters → Suffering begins → Faith is born → Redemption comes → Yahawashi is revealed.
Had Adam not fallen, there would be no Savior. No sacrifice. No meaning to redemption.
Evil did not defeat Yahawah. It served Him.
🦅🔥 3. The Time Appointed for Evil: Esau Edom & Babylon
Evil was not just a force. It was given to a bloodline:
- Esau Edom: The “vessel of wrath”
- Babylon (America): The last ruling empire of wickedness
“Esau is the end of the world, and Jacob is the beginning of it that followeth.”
— 2 Esdras 6:9
The Most High orchestrated the final era of evil to be the most corrupt:
- 🌐 Global exploitation
- 💸 Greed and consumerism
- 🧠 Media manipulation
- 🧒🏼 Child trafficking and perversion
- ☢️ Weapons of mass destruction
These aren’t just evils… they’re proof that man cannot rule himself.
Esau’s mismanagement proves why eternal rulership belongs to the righteous.
👼🏽⚔️ 4. Angels vs Israel: Why We’re Greater
Angels are obedient… but they don’t have choice. They were created to do Yahawah’s will without deviation. They are spiritual automatons.
Israel, however? We were born into sin. Given flesh. Exposed to evil. Tested.
Yet, when we choose Yahawah over the world, that faith is more glorious than angelic obedience.
“For verily he took not on him the nature of angels; but he took on him the seed of Abraham.”
— Hebrews 2:16
Yahawashi didn’t die for angels. He died for Israel.
Because the righteous who choose Yahawah are more precious than those who had no other choice.
🧠⏳ 5. Yahawah’s Mind vs Human Perspective
Many stumble here: If Yahawah wrote everything, how can He judge us?
The answer: He wrote the end from the beginning—but YOU don’t know the end.
You live your life in real-time. You feel joy, fear, temptation, regret.
So from YOUR perspective, you have free will.
From HIS perspective? You are moving through the script.
This is how Yahawah maintains:
- His divine sovereignty, and
- Our real accountability
He knows you will sin. But YOU don’t. That’s why He can judge. Because you had a real choice—from your perspective.
It’s not a paradox. It’s a multi-dimensional harmony.
🌅🚪 6. The Meaning of Good Is Found in Its Contrast
If evil had never existed… would we understand joy? Peace? Restoration?
No.
“To whom much is forgiven, the same loveth much.”
— Luke 7:47
The future kingdom won’t just be nice. It will be indescribably glorious—because of the darkness we endured to get there.
Imagine year 1,435,435 of the Kingdom of Heaven.
It’s still breathtaking. Still joyful. Because we remember Babylon. We remember slavery. We remember the struggle.
Revelation 21:4 – “And Yah shall wipe away all tears… and there shall be no more death, sorrow, or crying…”
Evil is the backdrop. Righteousness is the masterpiece.
🛡️👑 7. The End of Evil — The Rise of the Elect
It’s written: evil will end.
“Affliction shall not rise up the second time.”
— Nahum 1:9
Esau Edom will be judged. Babylon will be destroyed. Yahawashi will return. The elect—men, women, and children—will be glorified.
- 💎 No more sin
- 🌍 Earth renewed
- 👑 Zion rules forever
- 🔥 Evil cast into fire
This is not mythology. This is prophecy.
Isaiah 9:7 – “Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end…”
🌌📜 Conclusion: Yahawah’s Balance Was Perfect All Along
What we once viewed as chaos… was orchestration.
What we once cried out against… was a setup for salvation.
What we once blamed Yahawah for… we now praise Him for.
Evil never had the final word.
Yahawah wrote Evil as a chapter—not the story. He authored the fall to show us the meaning of redemption.
Without evil, there is no mercy.
Without pain, there is no healing.
Without darkness, there is no glory.
Evil ends.
Good reigns.
Forever.
✨ KAL HALAL YAHAWAH BAHASHAM YAHWASHI. AMEN.
Bartie Musa Commentary: This has been extremely long as it is, but necessary. I will keep the outro relatively short. But we will be continuing with part 2 of the problem of evil and focus more specifically on the free will aspect. LORD willing this was edifying and interesting, ALL praises to Yahawah bahasham Yahawashi, shalawam to the hopeful elect out there.




















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