Rod C. Davis, author, researcher and speaker, had his first known supernatural experience at the age of 15, and because it saved him from certain death, it left an ever lasting impression upon him. The second supernatural experience happened at the age of 17, and it prompted him to begin keeping a written record of each event.
Later in his life he began to conduct spiritual, supernatural and paranormal research, and through spiritual guidance, he eventually included biblical research. Now he is devoting most of his time to writing articles and books that are based upon his spiritual, supernatural, paranormal and biblical research. He also creates videos that are based upon his biblical research, titled Know Your Bible, and frequently posts them on YouTube & RodCDavis.Com. At this time his research is focused on the King James and Catholic Bibles, The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, the Gospels of the Nag Hammadi, and the Dead Sea Scrolls.
The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, formerly known as The Gospel of the Nazarenes, was discovered in a Tibetan monastery during the late 1870s, and is considered to be the long-lost Gospel of the Nazarenes, which was written by Jesus’ disciples shortly after His crucifixion. According to archaeologists, and a surprising number of scholars, this is an authentic writing. In support of that statement, the text contained in the Gospels of the Nag Hammadi and the Dead Sea Scrolls, which were discovered in the 1940s, has words, phrases, and concepts identical to the writings contained in the Gospel of the Holy Twelve.
The writings contained in The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, the Gospels of the Nag Hammadi, and the Dead Sea Scrolls, create a different, non-vindictive image of God and Jesus, than do the writings that are contained in the books of the King James and Catholic Bibles. The same guidance that led Rod to his Biblical research, also led him to share that information with as many people as possible. His Know Your Bible videos focus on the inconsistencies and contradictions that he has found within the King James and Catholic Bibles, as they pertain to the same stories written in The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, the Gospels of the Nag Hammadi, and the Dead Sea Scrolls.





