Millennial Taproot

The LORD God of Israel = God the Son

Non-Fiction - Religion/Philosophy
960 Pages
Reviewed on 05/13/2026
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    Book Review

Reviewed by Asher Syed for Readers' Favorite

Daniel D. Lelong’s Millennial Taproot leans into the message that Jesus of Nazareth is not merely connected to the LORD God of Israel; He is that LORD revealed in human form. Lelong wants readers to see YHVH as God the Son acting throughout Israel’s history before the incarnation, then appearing openly as Jesus to reveal the Father. This makes Christian faith, in his view, the true completion of Israel’s worship, not a separate religion. He argues that rabbinic authority obscures this by placing oral tradition between people and Scripture. His central demand is that believers leave inherited religious control behind and come directly to Yeshua. He also warns that modern global authority represents the same spiritual rebellion on a political scale. Lelong’s core claim is that freedom, truth, and salvation come only through direct allegiance to Jesus Christ as YHVH, Son, Savior, and returning King.

Daniel D. Lelong’s Millennial Taproot presents the divine name YHVH as a direct identification of Jesus before the incarnation, tying Israel’s God to Christ across scripture. A book framed this way matters during an era when religious belief increasingly collides with technological expansion and institutional distrust. The discussion connecting RFID identity systems to the Revelation prophecy gives present debates about surveillance a theological frame that feels tied directly to modern life. The writing is accessible even during doctrinal debate because the author continually connects theology to conduct. His discussion of “ego pinions” encourages readers to build daily routines around study and disciplined thought. His examination of logical fallacies also trains readers to examine political language more carefully before accepting public claims. The premise and overall message are strong. Adult Christians interested in prophecy, Messianic belief, or public theology will really love this book.