musterion
Well-known member
Yes, it's very easy to use your presumptions to view history.
Seriously...he's Catholic. Don't know if you saw it, but he said so yesterday. Just so you know you're arguing with Rome, not him.
Yes, it's very easy to use your presumptions to view history.
No, that was not the question. The question is why Jesus didn't let know that He was no longer putting Israel first. Gentiles were always allowed to join with Israel. That goes back to the day that they left Egypt.Galatians 4:4
But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman...
God obviously has different ordained times for different things, but my point was that God waited for thousands of years for the moment Paul calls the "fullness of time" (fullness as it relates to God's plan to send Christ).
The original question was "why did God wait the years between Acts 1 and Acts 10 to reach the Gentiles?"
The setting aside of Israel is temporary, just like Paul says in Romans.So you think he was just warning them to stay out of the light when the Jews arrested him so that they would not get arrested also???
He also said "in the world you will have tribulation".
This gets crazier and crazier
Thanks, that make a lot more sense....Seriously...he's Catholic. Don't know if you saw it, but he said so yesterday. Just so you know you're arguing with Rome, not him.
The cure for heresies like MADism is a simple history lesson :wave2:
“The divine institution of sacrifice was suitable in the former dispensation, but is not suitable now. For the change suitable to the present age has been enjoined by God, who knows infinitely better than man what is fitting for every age, and who is, whether He give or add, abolish or curtail, increase or diminish, the unchangeable Governor as He is the unchangeable Creator of mutable things, ordering all events in His providence until the beauty of the completed course of time, the component parts of which are the dispensations adapted to each successive age, shall be finished, like the grand melody of some ineffably wise master of song, and those pass into the eternal immediate contemplation of God who here, though it is a time of faith, not of sight, are acceptably worshipping Him.”
- Letter 138: Letter to Marcellinus, Sec. 5; Letters of Augustine, 3rd Div. AD 412
http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/1102138.htm
Nope. I simply made the observation that it would have been harder for the gospel to spread if Jesus would have came 200 years earlier. That is simple, historical fact.
I added my opinion that God came at a precise moment deliberately. I don't think that God came when he did by accident
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Is it a violation of TOL rules to use large font ?
You just will not accept the obvious !
The setting aside of Israel is temporary, just like Paul says in Romans.
Absolutely not.
Luke 23:34 (AKJV/PCE)(23:34) ¶ Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do. And they parted his raiment, and cast lots.
Jesus was not done with them yet.
Your timeline for His ministry is a bit out of whack.
Jesus didn't even send them OUT to START at Jerusalem until after His resurrection.
And that is all temporary.Who said anything about the setting aside of Israel?
I said that Jesus predicted that the disciples would be persecuted because He was. Jesus knew out of the gate that Jerusalem as a whole would never accept His truth. That's why He said "if they hate me they'll hate you".
You said that the prophesied persecution was temporary. Jesus never thought the Jews as a nation would accept His representatives. He told them point blank that they wouldn't.
Nonsense. The Bible says otherwise.He was not done with anyone who would respond to the Gospel, but as a nation, he was done with them.
Once again your math is way off.My timeline is exactly right. Jesus reached for them as a nation for 3 full years, and in the fourth year he had this to say.
Matthew 23:37-39
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not! Behold, your house is left unto you desolate. For I say unto you, Ye shall not see me henceforth, till ye shall say, Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord.
At this point they had rejected Him as a nation, and He rejected them.
This is in the 4th year of His ministry (as foretold by the fig tree parable).
Why do you CHOP that verse?Galatians 4:4
But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman...
Send Christ to whom?God obviously has different ordained times for different things, but my point was that God waited for thousands of years for the moment Paul calls the "fullness of time" (fullness as it relates to God's plan to send Christ).
He tells most all of it in that Bible.The original question was "why did God wait the years between Acts 1 and Acts 10 to reach the Gentiles?"
I answered with a statement and a question: "we don't know why-why did God wait thousands of years to send Jesus?"
One day he may tell us all about his timeline, and why he did the things he did at the precise moment that he did them.
He was not done with anyone who would respond to the Gospel, but as a nation, he was done with them.
My timeline is exactly right. Jesus reached for them as a nation for 3 full years, and in the fourth year he had this to say.
Matthew 23:37-39
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not! Behold, your house is left unto you desolate. For I say unto you, Ye shall not see me henceforth, till ye shall say, Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord.
At this point they had rejected Him as a nation, and He rejected them.
This is in the 4th year of His ministry (as foretold by the fig tree parable).
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Matthew 23:39 KJV "till you say",,,
Does "restful/peaceful" still mean TOXIC too?You don't understand Whitestone that that expression gets used 2 chapters later in the entry. So what he meant was that ANYONE who would sing that Psalm to him was in his kingdom and mission.
This is one of two lines where D'ism thinks Jesus is predicting the future, the other being Rom 11. Instead, in both cases he is making the distinction stronger between believer and non-b. There is no return to a 'program' with the ethne Jews. No place is that clear in the NT, and no place does it show when it would have 'saved the day' for Paul or another apostle.
You don't understand Whitestone that that expression gets used 2 chapters later in the entry. So what he meant was that ANYONE who would sing that Psalm to him was in his kingdom and mission.
This is one of two lines where D'ism thinks Jesus is predicting the future, the other being Rom 11. Instead, in both cases he is making the distinction stronger between believer and non-b. There is no return to a 'program' with the ethne Jews. No place is that clear in the NT, and no place does it show when it would have 'saved the day' for Paul or another apostle.
Things that are different are NOT the same!
Matthew 19:16-17 KJV vs. Romans 3:21-22 KJV
Acts 10:35 KJV vs. Titus 3:5 KJV
Hebrews 3:14 KJV vs Ephesians 3:6 KJV
James 2:20 KJV vs Ephesians 2:8-9 KJV
Matthew 23:39 KJV "till you say",,,
Why do you CHOP that verse?
Gal 4:4-5 (AKJV/PCE)(4:4) But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, (4:5) To redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.
You were not challenged to prove Paul said it. I was asking which one your where talking about about. And NO it was NOT "stated unequivocally that Paul had never used that term". That's just you making things up to inflate your ego.I live every part of that verse. I stopped where I did because I was challenged to prove that Paul, anywhere in the Bible, had stated that the "fullness of time" had come when Jesus was born.
It was stated unequivocally that Paul had never used that term, and I proved he had.
I haven't seen the "I'm sorry, I was wrong" yet.