Was Jesus Married?

πŸ’ Was Jesus Married?

✨ A Gentle Introduction to a Sacred Possibility

Let’s just start by asking the question:

Was Jesus of Nazareth married?

We’ve been told “no” our whole lives. But what if there’s more to the story? What if the records of His people in the Old World and the New World say something different?

Today, we’re not giving you dogma.
We’re offering you a door.
You decide whether to knock.


πŸ“œ The Nemenhah Record Says...

In the sacred writings of the Nemenhah—records kept by the ancient remnant of Lehi’s family in the Americas—there’s a moment where two translated beings (Nephi and Timothy) visit a great council of the people. They bring a letter from Europe.

Not just any letter. A royal genealogy. A sacred witness.

Here's what it says:

"I am Batilde... I must give you my witness and most solemn testimony that this same man whom you call the Peacemaker is He whom we call Father. For He is our own ancestor and we descend from His children."
Book of Mohmeht Ahkehkt, Chapter 2

Batilde names her ancestors:

  • Josue, the son of Jesu the Cristus and Marie Magdalena

  • Down through royal lines: Aminadab, Titurel, Anfortas, Clovis, Dagobert

  • All the way to her sons, Childeric and Theuderic, kings of Austrasia

πŸ‘‰ This isn’t just myth. It’s a family tree. A testimony. A sacred patent.


🌿 Why This Matters

Let’s be clear:

  • The Nemenhah do not present this as speculation. They recorded it as divine revelation.

  • They accepted Batilde’s letter as truth given through translated messengers.

  • They rejoiced to know that Christ’s literal posterity lived among men and would one day be gathered again.

They didn’t argue doctrine.
They welcomed the family.

"It fills us with great joy that He who took us all unto His bosom and became Father and God unto us, does also give us brothers and sisters in a faraway land."
Mohmeht Ahkehkt 3:5


🧬 But What About Scripture?

We ask:
Does it matter that the Bible doesn’t say Jesus was married?

Well... the Bible also doesn’t say He wasn’t.

And it doesn’t mention most of His life at all—only snippets from age 12 to 33.

Even some early Christians believed Mary Magdalene was more than a disciple.

Some apocryphal writings (like the Gospel of Mary) hint at a special relationship between her and Jesus. The Nemenhahgo one step further:

“Jesu was a man most holy… We worship this same Jesu… and we descend from His children.”
Batilde, Mohmeht Ahkehkt 2:31


🧭 So What Do We Do With This?

We’re not asking you to believe something new today.
We’re just asking you to open your heart to the possibility...

That the Restoration isn’t over.
That the records hidden in the earth are still coming forth.
That Jesus—the Peacemaker—may have walked the earth as a husband, father, and Savior.

And that His family may still walk it today.


πŸ“š Want to Learn More?

  • Read The Book of Mohmeht Ahkehkt, Chapters 2–3

  • Study the genealogy given by Batilde, including Josue and Aminadab

  • Pray about it. Don’t ask your Bishop—ask the Haymehnay (the Holy Ghost)


πŸ”” Final Thought

“Even if they do not keep all things in common... they shall retain many of its principles in their hearts and in their customs, and all shall not be lost.”
Mohmeht Ahkehkt 3:30

Maybe we’ve lost some truths.
But maybe they’re coming back.

One record at a time.
One question at a time.
One heart at a time.

πŸ•Š️ Was Jesus married?
We don’t know for sure.

But maybe… just maybe… the Remnant does.


πŸ“œ A Simple Lineage: The Royal Bloodline of the Peacemaker?

In the Nemenhah Records—specifically in The Book of Mohmeht Ahkehkt—a European noblewoman named Batildesends a letter to the Nemenhah people. She claims something extraordinary:

"I must give you my witness and most solemn testimony that this same man whom you call the Peacemaker is He whom we call Father. For He is our own ancestor and we descend from His children."
— Mohmeht Ahkehkt, Chapter 2

According to her letter, she descends from Jesus the Christ and Mary Magdalene through their son, Josue.


🧬 The Lineage (As Recorded by Batilde)

Here is the line as she gives it, in simple words:

  • Jesus the Christ

  • and Mary Magdalene
    → had a son named Josue
    → who fathered Aminadab
    → followed by Catheloys (also called Castellors)
    → then ManaelTiturelFrimutel, and Anfortas (also called Boaz)
    → then FrotmundFaramundClodion, and Meroveus
    → then Childeric, and Clovis

At this point, the line enters verifiable European history. These names—Meroveus, Childeric, Clovis—are part of the Merovingian dynasty, ancient kings of the Franks.

From there:

  • Lothar

  • Chilperic

  • another Lothar

  • then Dagobert I

  • his son: Clovis II, King of Neustria and Burgundy

  • and finally: Batilde, Queen and mother of kings Childeric II and Theuderic III


🏰 What’s Confirmed by Historians?

  • Batilde was real—a Frankish queen, later canonized as a Catholic saint.

  • Her husband, Clovis II, and their sons were kings in what is now France and western Germany.

  • The Merovingian dynasty is well-documented from the 5th to 8th centuries.

What’s not confirmed is the earlier portion—the line from Jesus, Josue, and the figures like Titurel or Anfortas. Those names are sacred tradition, not verified in historical archives.


A Surprising Common Ancestor: Joseph Smith, Presidents & Pilgrims

It turns out there's a fascinating genealogical thread connecting Joseph Smith, several U.S. presidents, and early American pioneers—threaded through a single key figure:

πŸ”Ή Rev. John Lothropp (1584–1653)

In fact, most early Church leaders can trace their ancestry back to Lothropp!


πŸ•Š️ Why Share This?

This isn’t about proving a theory.
It’s about honoring a story—one preserved by a people who believed they were stewards of sacred memory.

Maybe Batilde was wrong.    
Maybe she was right.

Or maybe… this is a truth the world wasn’t ready to keep—but couldn’t quite forget.

Maybe Joseph had good blood.

Do bloodlines matter?  See the next post! πŸ’–

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