In a prior blog post I discussed the Biblical proof of Nephilim. And, by the way, before I go any further, let me just state that I’m pretty confident the correct usage is Nephil for singular and Nephilym for plural. But I’m just going with the more common Nephilim for both … like deer: just crazed, giant, mutilated, half-spirit, half-natural deer.

Anywayyyy, we know the Bible is clear that Nephilim existed. But why don’t we have physical evidence of them sitting in museums today? It’s a great question, and one I can’t answer for certain. But I do know this, there most definitely is evidence of Nephilim out there … and with it, comes what appears to be an intentional agenda to bury it all.

Now that statement sounds like a conspiracy theory is coming, right? And I guess I’ll have to say there just might be. But remember a conspiracy is only a conspiracy until the truth comes out. So, what’s the evidence? Where’s the proof? How about this for starters. In South Africa today, you can visit this rock known as Goliath’s Footprint:

Ranging from 4’ to 6’ in length (depending on where you want to take your measurements), this unusual form is just the effect of wind and rain on the region’s millennia-old granite … or so say the scientists. Normal people know this is a footprint!

Clearly something very large walked in this area (likely over cooling magma), leaving behind this massive print. You can almost see the soft rock squishing out between the giant’s toes as it walked by. The stone is vertical today likely because an ancient earthquake, or some other tectonic movement, forced it upright.

Okay, so that’s one interesting piece of evidence. But one picture doesn’t make the Nephilim fact. What else do we have? Well, this is where things get a little conspiracy’esque. Years ago, when I first began researching the giants, I found a treasure trove of fraudulent Nephilim stories and photos. One famous example was from an 1800’s farm where the landowner eventually fessed up to burying a fake Nephilim skeleton he had made of clay and concrete, etc (But hey, he had made a lot of money in the ruse). Unfortunately, today there are a ton more out there on TikTok and other social media accounts too. There are so many, in fact, that believing there might actually be some validity to the Nephilim claims feels ludicrous. But, back to my search: As I went deeper, I eventually began finding newspaper articles that, at least on the surface, seemed legit. Then I found more. Soon I had pages of them. On my wife’s wise council, I copied them onto my own computer knowing these articles just might “disappear”. Now years later, they have … behind paywalls or just **poof** gone. I am happy to share just a few of them with you:

I’ve got pages and pages more. If you happen to have access behind New York Times’ paywall and want to dive in, I have articles dated 11/21/1856, 8/10/1880, 5/25/1882, 4/11/1891, 12/21/1891, 10/3/1892, 5/4/1912, and 6/21/1925 (I’m super curious if these articles have somehow disappeared, going the way of the dodo, or if they’re still out there on microfiche). I have others from the L.A. Times and Washington Post. But I’m leaving them all off this blog as I have no interest in receiving some fun attorney letters.

Now as someone who’s seen lots of Nephilim photos (mostly fake) and read lots of stories, I believe these particular articles are very much the real thing. You’ll begin to see repeating themes across them in regard to Nephilim heights (most are in the 7’ to 8’ range), many are buried in mounds with shells, and often they are found in strange burial positions (bound sitting upright is common). And these themes hold true whether the discoveries were made in France, Russia, Mexico, Ireland, or the United States to name just a few. If all of these were fake, it would have been quite a global effort to keep their stories the same over at least the last 200 years.

So if true, then where did the skeletons go … and why? This brings us to the heart of the conspiracy. We just don’t know. But in many of these articles you’ll discover some sort of benefactor showing up (or a national museum who shall not be named) which purchases the find, takes over, and then that’s it. That’s the last we hear of it.

If you’ve read my series The Lucifer Project, you know I have fun speculating on this. But the reality is we just don’t know … and probably never will. But I think this personal account I stumbled onto years ago (that once again seems to have been scrubbed from the internet) wraps everything up nicely:

Back in the days between WWI and WWII, an American kid living out in the sticks (I think it was in Oklahoma, but my memory is fuzzy) used to love going to his community’s tiny, local museum with his father. They went several times a year and this kid’s favorite exhibit was always this giant skeleton inside a glass case, one which was way bigger than any normal human being. He grew up and eventually moved out of state. He didn’t see his parents very often after that. And more important to this story, as an adult, he never returned to the museum … at least until his father passed away. Returning for the funeral, he remembered the good times at the museum with his dad and went to see that exhibit one last time. But once he got there, it was gone. He went to the curator and asked about it, but the man looked at him cross-eyed. There never had been any giant there.

For you researchy-type folks, here are the regions and years of all the US-based Nephilim articles that I have found. I obviously can’t guarantee these are all real. But I also can’t prove they aren’t. Maybe you can find them for yourself and make your own opinion.