What do you mean by that?
Paul was uniquely given a dispensation of the gospel. Paul calls it MY GOSPEL (which should mean something, but most people just ignore it).
I say it simply means that he was appointed by Jesus to take the gospel to the Gentiles.
Paul was appointed to take the gospel to all.
Acts 9:15 (AKJV/PCE)
(9:15) But the Lord said unto him, Go thy way: for he is a chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles, and kings, and the children of Israel:
That does not mean he was to preach the gospel only to the Gentiles, or that there was a separation between Jew and Gentile.
Did someone say that?
In fact there were places where the two groups were still keeping themselves separate and Paul addressed this. Peter also preached the gospel to Jew and Gentile.
Not the same gospel. Look at Acts 10. You cannot find Peter preaching the gospel of the grace of God there.
If you think it means something different than that----what is it? And why are you making such a big deal out of it? There must be a reason. What is it?
Because there are many gospels in the Bible. And there is a commission that Christ gave the TWELVE that is different than the commission that Christ gave to the ONE, Paul.
And I did not say that you or dispensationalists teach multiple ways to eternal like. I don't think that.
Good.
That is why I don't think either view of what we are discussing and debating, affects salvation. Where we are differing really is in eschatological views. Yours comes out of dispensationalism, mine does not.
In the end, there is a city with twelve foundation and the names of the TWELVE apostles is there. These are the TWELVE apostles that will sit on TWELVE thrones judging the TWELVE tribes of Israel.
If a person cannot clarify what they think a scripture is saying, in other words put the truth they see into their own words, it is usually because are unable to or don't know how to articulate it. To just refer to a scripture or quote it tells know one what you believe it says. True Christians acknowledge the truthfulness of scripture. That is not in question. And we cannot see into one another's heads to know what they think the scripture is teaching. Scripture should be used as support for what we assert, not stand alone.
Israel: Kingdom on the earth with Christ as King.
Body of Christ: Place in heaven with Christ as Head.
On what do you base the statement that the book of Hebrews is not directed at the body of Christ?
- It is directed TO THE HEBREWS.
- It's doctrines are clearly associated with the nation of Israel.
At the time it was written, its purpose may have been primarily to clarify to Jewish believers (I say this because it uses extensive references to the ceremonial law, showing how it points to Christ and is fulfilled in Christ.) But Christians today have both OT and NT--- and the NT reveals much of what was only shadowed in the OT. Therefore it is for the body of Christ. It was one of the most eye opening books I read as a new Christian, explaining and making the connection of the OT to the NT. As well as the purpose of what we read historically in the old testament.
It is valuable to the body of Christ as long as the CONTEXT is understood. But most of Churchianity does NOT understand that and make a mess of doctrines because of it.
I never said Paul wrote the book of Hebrews and I don't know what that has to do with anything.
I said that Paul never used the words PRIEST nor PRIESTHOOD in any of his thirteen epistles; your response included quotes from Hebrews and Peter. What was I supposed to think you were getting at?
The book has much to do with supporting the Hebrews as the were kicked out of their land when they were told that the kingdom was at hand. It's a lot about "keeping the faith" for the believing nation of Israel.
Whether one says the kingdom or the kingdom of God makes a difference when a person is using that prayer to "prove" that Israel has the kingdom on earth and Gentiles in heaven.
Again it's NOT "Gentiles in heaven". You keep trying to get off track.
There are (technically) Jews and gentiles in both programs. Although, Paul says that in the body of Christ there is NEITHER. Gal 3:28
Jesus does not say " the kingdom You promised to Israel with me as King, come."
He didn't have to. They knew what He was talking about.
He says "Your kingdom come, you will be done." Your interpretation of that prayer is coming from your presupposed beliefs about Israel, not from what the prayer actually says. Just as your interpretation of a literal 1000 years of Jews only on earth and Christ ruling as their king comes out of the lens you choose to look through.
Your lens is foggy and opaque.
There are other ways to interpret Revelation than the dispensationalist way.
Sure there is. It doesn't make any of them correct.
And though you can legitimately have your beliefs, those that don't affect salvation, they are not automatically right simply because it is what you believe. And as an aside, there is scarcelyly a person now alive who has not had this view of the interpretation of Revelation almost exclusively taught to them. That started back in the 60's and 70's, when there was an intense focus on discerning the times and parsing Revelation. So let the rest of us have a bit of breathing room and grace extended to not believe as you do.
The book of Revelation is just completely dripping with Israelite language and doctrines as well. But I can see how your blinder to not allow you to see.
Are you absolutely positive that Jesus spent those 40 days teaching what you believe about the kingdom?
Yep.
What they understood, was the same thing you understood---or misunderstood as Jesus pointed out---and that is that the kingdom of God is an earthly kingdom, the nation Israel.
The ONLY thing that they misunderstood was the TIMING ... as Jesus pointed out.
It is the very thing they believed early one and still didn't get. It stems from a misunderstanding that existed in the OT of who the Messiah was and what He would do. They thought Messiah was a human king that would restore autonomy to geographic Israel.
They only thought that because that is what God said throughout the Bible.
They thought only the descendents of Abraham were God's people.
Abraham had many descendants that were not Israelite's.
Jesus did not come to restore or save (deliver from enemies) only a geographic place and an ethic people. He came, and lived and died to save His people from all nations and tribes and languages. All those joined to Christ through faith are true Israel----God's people.
Yes and no. I guess that you've torn many pages from your Bible to be able to believe that.
No they did not fully understand what the kingdom was.
FORTY DAYS of teaching from the RISEN LORD Jesus Christ. Was our LORD a bad teacher?
And since Jesus appointed the apostles to lay the foundations of His church and to take the gospel to the world, I am much more inclined to believe this is what He taught them-----everything we find in the epistles and the gospels.
And you think that I don't believe "everything we find in the epistles and the gospels"?