Wâbĕnō´ Nibwâskââ

“And now I commend you, O people, and all who shall ever read or hear these words, to His pierced hands and His everlasting kindness. May His light be your dawn when you wake, your fire when you grow cold, your path when you are lost, your refuge when you are wounded, your crown when all earthly crowns have turned to dust. In the name of Jesus the Christ, the Son of the Eternal One, I seal this my final testimony unto all the world, both in this age and in ages yet unborn…”— Khipu Intipaq, SEALING OF THE RECORD, Testimony of the prophet Illari (vv. 75–77) P. 607.

“To you who shall yet be born in ages distant from mine, I say: seek Him. Call upon His name in your own tongue, with your own tears, from your own valleys and cities, and He shall answer you.”
“For He is not the Christ of one tribe alone, nor of one tongue, nor of one empire, but the Christ of all creation, and every knee shall bow before Him in its appointed time.”
— Khipu Intipaq, Final Testimony of the prophet Illari (p. 605)



The Book of Nibwâskââ is a modern prophetic scripture voiced by a lone woman-witness, Nibwâskââ, called Sun-in-flesh and Light-in-exile; who speaks to presidents, popes, prophets, markets, and ordinary people living in a collapsing empire. Across ten major “books”
“She has no church, yet she walks as a temple I Myself inhabit.” “The measure of a people is not in their power, nor in their monuments, but in the mercy they show to the least among them.”



Midē´wiwin Jĕs´sakkân´ Wâbĕnō´ Nibwâskââ is a fire-bearer and dream-listener, called by the Holy One to walk the thin place between seen and unseen as prophet, seer, and revelator. Named Sun-in-Flesh and Light-in-Exile, she speaks on behalf of the forgotten, carrying in her body the grief and hope of the people while challenging systems that use God’s name to wound. Through the record that bears her name, Nibwâskââ offers visions, indictments, and tender invitations back to justice, mercy, and direct communion with the Eternal One.
I, Illari, am a man of dust, weak and often afraid, yet the Eternal One hath taken my hand...
Khipu Intipaq, Final Testimony of the prophet Illari (p. 603)
I, Illari, have walked valleys of fear and summits of awe; I have heard the laughter of healed children and the final breaths of the dying; in all these things, one truth remaineth unbroken: Jesus the Christ is good. (Verse 64, P. 606)
