ISAIAH 3: Explanatory Foreword

FOREWORD TO ISAIAH THREE (by John David) –
Isaiah predicts the imminent destruction of Jerusalem & Judah.
Isaiah describes in his discerning vision a Jerusalem abandoned to wickedness and corruption with Judah’s governors acting with the folly of a child’s behavior. Law and order is imploding with immorality. Abject women rule in pomp and pride, consumed with the vanities of fashion.

Men have willingly abandoned their male lechery lusting instead for one another. Sodomy is prolific and the other gender have painted themselves like Jezebel in the vanity of attracting their own kind. On the other hand, the remnant of remaining god-fearing disciples of Yahweh are oppressed and persecuted for their peculiar faith by the apostate descendants of David.

Healthy heterogeneity has been exchanged for homogeneous iniquity pervading the city and its environs. The righteous remnant are seen as a threat because of their peculiarities. One wonders what Isaiah would say to any modern day city in his preaching if he were alive today.

Isaiah 3 https://www.biblegateway.com/ public domain.
CHAPTER THREE.
1 For, behold, the Lord, the Lord of hosts, doth take away from Jerusalem and from Judah the stay and the staff, the whole stay of bread, and the whole stay of water.
2 The mighty man, and the man of war, the judge, and the prophet, and the prudent, and the ancient,
3 The captain of fifty, and the honourable man, and the counsellor, and the cunning artificer, and the eloquent orator.

4 And I will give children to be their princes, and babes shall rule over them.
5 And the people shall be oppressed, every one by another, and every one by his neighbour: the child shall behave himself proudly against the ancient, and the base against the honourable.
6 When a man shall take hold of his brother of the house of his father, saying, Thou hast clothing, be thou our ruler, and let this ruin be under thy hand:

7 In that day shall he swear, saying, I will not be an healer; for in my house is neither bread nor clothing: make me not a ruler of the people.
8 For Jerusalem is ruined, and Judah is fallen: because their tongue and their doings are against the Lord, to provoke the eyes of his glory.
9 The shew of their countenance doth witness against them; and they declare their sin as Sodom, they hide it not. Woe unto their soul! for they have rewarded evil unto themselves.

10 Say ye to the righteous, that it shall be well with him: for they shall eat the fruit of their doings.
11 Woe unto the wicked! it shall be ill with him: for the reward of his hands shall be given him.
12 As for my people, children are their oppressors, and women rule over them. O my people, they which lead thee cause thee to err, and destroy the way of thy paths.

13 The Lord standeth up to plead, and standeth to judge the people.
14 The Lord will enter into judgment with the ancients of his people, and the princes thereof: for ye have eaten up the vineyard; the spoil of the poor is in your houses.
15 What mean ye that ye beat my people to pieces, and grind the faces of the poor? saith the Lord God of hosts.

16 Moreover the Lord saith, Because the daughters of Zion are haughty, and walk with stretched forth necks and wanton eyes, walking and mincing as they go, and making a tinkling with their feet:
17 Therefore the Lord will smite with a scab the crown of the head of the daughters of Zion, and the Lord will discover their secret parts.
18 In that day the Lord will take away the bravery of their tinkling ornaments about their feet, and their cauls, and their round tires like the moon,

19 The chains, and the bracelets, and the mufflers,
20 The bonnets, and the ornaments of the legs, and the headbands, and the tablets, and the earrings,
21 The rings, and nose jewels,

22 The changeable suits of apparel, and the mantles, and the wimples, and the crisping pins,
23 The glasses, and the fine linen, and the hoods, and the vails.
24 And it shall come to pass, that instead of sweet smell there shall be stink; and instead of a girdle a rent; and instead of well set hair baldness; and instead of a stomacher a girding of sackcloth; and burning instead of beauty.

25 Thy men shall fall by the sword, and thy mighty in the war.
26 And her gates shall lament and mourn; and she being desolate shall sit upon the ground.

KJV – Public Domain:https://www.biblegateway.com/

ISAIAH 3: Explanatory Foreword

ISAIAH: Explanatory Preface.

PREFACE: by John David
The book of the prophet Isaiah is a problem to the first reader without some prefatory comments to orient the reader not used to its unusual style. The difficulties of language and parlance are explained hereunder:

1. The imagery, and oblique allusions to the main historical actors of the time;
2. The combined influence of the Hebrew language and the later Septuagint’s Greek manuscripts consulted;
3. The metaphors, metonyms, and pseudonyms without the reader’s historical knowledge from the books of Samuel, Kings and Chronicles can be puzzling or even an enigma;

4. The allegories and similes can, at times, be off-putting, because they are based upon the historical scenario of Israel’s surrounding environs;

Considering the above factors the reader may find the text abstract and without much further thought miss the treasures of the prophecies, the promises, their later fulfilment, and glorious description of the end times which are corroborate with other major and minor prophetical books of Scripture end times’ predictions on the second coming of Christ, called the Second Advent.

The book’s historical sequence in prophecy, promise and narration is consistent and cohesive. However, it can be difficult to discern between Isaiah’s own convictions and his direct revelations from God.

Seven centuries before Christ’s birth Jehovah was about to remove the ten rebel idolatrous tribes from the north alluded to under the pseudonyms of Israel, Samaria, or Ephraim. The two apostate but opposing segments of Solomon’s kingdom of David were Judah (& Benjamin) in the south, and the ten confederate rebel tribes of Israel in the north. Despite faithful prophets over multiple decades who had warned them they were both ripe for destruction and captivity by Syria, Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, the Medo-Persian usurping empire and the sufferings of increasing civil war between each other.
John David

ISAIAH: Explanatory Preface to the Book

ISAIAH 2: Foreword

Isaiah’s future hope: the 1st & 2nd coming of Christ.
Having described Jerusalem’s decadence and its self-inflicted woes, God’s voice through Isaiah his mouthpiece, calls Jerusalem a wayward woman. Albeit, the prophet sees Jerusalem through the eyes of the distant future. He encompasses both the First Advent and the Second Coming of Christ (the Second Advent) to planet Earth. Prior to the second advent he foresees the apocalyptic judgment of Earth by a wrathful God acting in vengeance for its endemic wickedness and rejection of his entreaties offering merciful forgiveness to genuine penitents. Whether from prophets, apostles, evangelists or saints the resistance was impenetrable.

Immanuel, Christ would first come as a Lamb, and then return at the end of the age as King of Kings to rule and reign with a rod of iron from Zion. The millennial reign of Jesus Christ would be from Jerusalem where he is due to return on the Mount of Olives, from which he ascended not Galilee as the 4th C amended Matthew 26; 28; Mark 14; & 16 purport. As Luke, John, and Acts declare: His passion, resurrection, and ascension was not from Galilee’s unnamed mountain, but Jerusalem near Bethany on the Mt. Olivet. The major prophets and the minor prophets agree with John and Luke that the second advent return of Immanuel will be to Jerusalem. Importantly and precisely Zechariah 14 correlates with Luke where (in Acts 1) before the apostles the angel heralds the eventual returning descent of Christ to the very same Mount of Olives. This made the apostles of Christ beholden to proclaim that same message as harbingers of the Second Coming.
John David
KJV Scripture Chapter Isaiah 2: public Domain see:
http://bonitabiblemission.worthyofpraise.org/isaiah-2-foreword/

ISAIAH 2: Explanatory Foreword

EXPLAINING ISAIAH: A PROLOGUE

PROLOGUE TO THE BOOK OF ISAIAH.

Isaiah the prophet of Judah, was born at the end of King Uzziah’s reign. He was to serve the Lord as His main spokesman through the last days of Uzziah and the ensuing reigns of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah before his rumoured martyrdom by Manasseh, righteous Hezekiah’s wicked son, whose idolatrous evil acts exceeded Ahaz, his grandfather.

Isaiah’s call to the ministry seems to have been precipitated by his vision in an encounter with God in chapter six when he is anointed with fire and appointed to be the prophet of God in Jerusalem. Sinful Isaiah is purged, anointed and commissioned to be His spokesman to a rebellious populace, whose ears would be shut to his entreaties. The Lord’s seraphic messenger forewarns him that in the final days of Jerusalem only a tenth of the people would remain after successive attacks invasions, sieges, and wars by Samaria ; Egypt; Syria; Assyria, Ammon; Edom; and Babylon .Isaiah, however, can use ‘Ephraim’ to denote the tribe, territory, or area given by Joshua to the 12 tribes of Israel after crossing Jordan River to first settle the Promised Land of Canaan. It is important for the reader to make these distinctions which the text, syntax, scene and footnotes help determine.

EXPLAINING ISAIAH: A PROLOGUE

BIBLE HIGHLIGHTS FOR STUDENTS: Jerusalem’s last days.

THE LAST DAYS OF THE OLD KINGDOM OF ISRAEL.
Judah’s last days under puppet kings of Egypt & Babylon.
2 Chronicles 36 (KJV-Public domain).
1. Then the people of the land took Jehoahaz the son of Josiah, and made him king in his father’s stead in Jerusalem .
2 Jehoahaz was twenty and three years old when he began to reign, and he reigned three months in Jerusalem.
3 And the king of Egypt put him down at Jerusalem, and condemned the land in an hundred talents of silver and a talent of gold.
4 And the king of Egypt made Eliakim his brother king over Judah and Jerusalem, and turned his name to Jehoiakim. And Necho took Jehoahaz his brother, and carried him to Egypt.
5 Jehoiakim was twenty and five years old when he began to reign, and he reigned eleven years in Jerusalem: and he did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord his God.
6 Against him came up Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, and bound him in fetters, to carry him to Babylon.
7 Nebuchadnezzar also carried of the vessels of the house of the Lord to Babylon, and put them in his temple at Babylon.
8 Now the rest of the acts of Jehoiakim, and his abominations which he did, and that which was found in him, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Israel and Judah: and Jehoiachin his son reigned in his stead.
9 Jehoiachin was eight years old when he began to reign, and he reigned three months and ten days in Jerusalem: and he did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord.
10 And when the year was expired, king Nebuchadnezzar sent, and brought him to Babylon, with the goodly vessels of the house of the Lord, and made Zedekiah his brother king over Judah and Jerusalem.
11 Zedekiah was one and twenty years old when he began to reign, and reigned eleven years in Jerusalem.
12 And he did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord his God, and humbled not himself before Jeremiah the prophet speaking from the mouth of the Lord.
13 And he also rebelled against king Nebuchadnezzar, who had made him swear by God: but he stiffened his neck, and hardened his heart from turning unto the Lord God of Israel.
14 Moreover all the chief of the priests, and the people, transgressed very much after all the abominations of the heathen; and polluted the house of the Lord which he had hallowed in Jerusalem.
15 And the Lord God of their fathers sent to them by his messengers, rising up betimes, and sending; because he had compassion on his people, and on his dwelling place:
16 But they mocked the messengers of God, and despised his words, and misused his prophets, until the wrath of the Lord arose against his people, till there was no remedy.
17 Therefore he brought upon them the king of the Chaldees, who slew their young men with the sword in the house of their sanctuary, and had no compassion upon young man or maiden, old man, or him that stooped for age: he gave them all into his hand.
18 And all the vessels of the house of God, great and small, and the treasures of the house of the Lord, and the treasures of the king, and of his princes; all these he brought to Babylon.
19 And they burnt the house of God, and brake down the wall of Jerusalem, and burnt all the palaces thereof with fire, and destroyed all the goodly vessels thereof.
20 And them that had escaped from the sword carried he away to Babylon; where they were servants to him and his sons until the reign of the kingdom of Persia:
21 To fulfil the word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremiah, until the land had enjoyed her Sabbaths: for as long as she lay desolate she kept sabbath, to fulfil threescore and ten years.
22 Now in the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, that the word of the Lord spoken by the mouth of Jeremiah might be accomplished, the Lord stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia, that he made a proclamation throughout all his kingdom, and put it also in writing, saying,
23 Thus saith Cyrus king of Persia, All the kingdoms of the earth hath the Lord God of heaven given me; and he hath charged me to build him an house in Jerusalem, which is in Judah. Who is there among you of all his people? The Lord his God be with him, and let him go up.
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STUDENT’S FOOTNOTE.
Jerusalem’s days were numbered, ninety to be exact, before the beginning of the end. After three months Pharaoh invaded, plundered, and took a host of the populace prisoners of war. What he had left undone Nebuchadnezzar destroyed, including the city walls and the temple, when he also took most of the remaining citizens away to Babylon.
POSTSCRIPT:
This is a salutary warning to any Judeo-Christian nation which turns its back on the God of peace and becomes so aggressive and violent in getting its own way that the civil unrest is tantamount to civil war. Beware the end is nigh for God will use the atheistic nations and the religious enemies of Christ to judge and destroy it.
To whom much is given shall much be required. The greatest sin of such a nation today is not the violence or the puritanical hypocrisy, but its abandonment of public prayer amid its worship of worship by its churches.

BIBLE HIGHLIGHTS FOR STUDENTS: Jerusalem’s last days.

SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES: Did Jesus Baptize?

Truth is Stranger than Fiction: Baptism
Matthew 28
In the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulchre.
2 And, behold, there was a great earthquake: for the angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled back the stone from the door, and sat upon it.
3 His countenance was like lightning, and his raiment white as snow:
4 And for fear of him the keepers did shake, and became as dead men.
5 And the angel answered and said unto the women, Fear not ye: for I know that ye seek Jesus, which was crucified.
6 He is not here: for he is risen, as he said. Come, see the place where the Lord lay.
7 And go quickly, and tell his disciples that he is risen from the dead; and, behold, he goeth before you into GALILEE; there shall ye see him: lo, I have told you.
8 And they departed quickly from the sepulchre with fear and great joy; and did run to bring his disciples word.
9 And as they went to tell his disciples, behold, Jesus met them, saying, All hail. And they came and held him by the feet, and worshipped him.
10 Then said Jesus unto them, Be not afraid: go tell my brethren that they go into GALILEE , and there shall they see me.
11 Now when they were going, behold, some of the watch came into the city, and shewed unto the chief priests all the things that were done.
12 And when they were assembled with the elders, and had taken counsel, they gave large money unto the soldiers,
13 Saying, Say ye, His disciples came by night, and stole him away while we slept.
14 And if this come to the governor’s ears, we will persuade him, and secure you.
15 So they took the money, and did as they were taught: and this saying is commonly reported among the Jews until this day.
16 Then the eleven disciples went away into GALILEE , into a mountain where Jesus had appointed them.
17 And when they saw him, they worshipped him: but some doubted.
18 And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth.
19 Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
20Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world. Amen.  
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FOOTNOTES
Matthew 28:7; 10; 16. Jerusalem was the location of his passion, resurrection, forty days’ appearances; apostolic commission and ascension from the Mount of Olives nearby . Cp. Footnote to verse 20.
Matthew 28:10
Matthew 28:16
Matthew 28:19. The apostles did not practise a threefold invocation, seemingly unaware of its decree. Harmonizing the Gospels and Acts there was only one Great Commission given to the apostles. Zechariah 14 predicted Christ’s return to Mt. Olivet where Luke also locates both ascension and second coming. Luke 24; Acts 1. St. John too, focused on Jerusalem, notwithstanding his Epilogue, chapter 21.

SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES: Did Jesus Baptize?

The Truth About Christian Baptism

TWO OF ROME’S SEVEN SACRAMENTS STILL IN THE PROTESTANT BIBLE.
With the advent of Gutenberg’s 15th C printing press the 16th C Puritan Fathers of the Reformation began printing Bibles in the national tongues of nearby regions. Precious Greek manuscripts came to Europe, when Islam invaded Constantinople in the early 15th C. Thus the Renaissance Christian humanists gained unprecedented access to the original Koine Greek Scriptures. One of these was Erasmus who published a Greek New Testament about 1519, only two years after Martin Luther began the Reformation.

This opened the eyes of scholars and translators to five of the seven Latin sacraments that did not appear in the original Greek. They had been inserted by the Roman Emperor Constantine shortly after ascending the throne in the early 4th C. He had instructed Eusebius and his team of literati to revise the Old Latin Bible and scroll fifty new Latin Bibles endorsing his seven priestly sacraments for the inaugural founding of his Church of Rome.

However, the first German, English, and French Bibles printed included only the rites of water, wine and wafer integral to the two ordinances found in the Greek Testament of Erasmus.

During this study we will look at these two rites and the disparities between the three apostolic commissions found in Matthew, Mark, and Luke’s Acts of the Apostles. Not only was each commission different from the others, but two of them were , in hindsight, never endorsed by the Saviour during the entire length of his earthly ministry before his arrest. While this can be verified from any of the three Synoptic Gospels, it is also true of the fourth Gospel, notwithstanding one rumour to the contrary in John 3.

The Truth About Christian Baptism

COMPLETING THE REFORMATION 500 YEARS LATER.

COMPLETING THE REFORMATION 500 YEARS LATER.
The Church of Rome’s water wine and wafer still divides her ‘separated brethren’
1. The reader’s reaction to this article is dependent upon whether or not he is totally captive to the Man of the Book, or to a denominational movement.
2. The primacy of Jesus’ practice and teaching during his life-time ministry is more sacrosanct than those of flawed human apostles; or early Roman Church Fathers (apostolic fathers) in the post apostolic period of the 2nd C and 3rd C.
3. Whoever thinks that is not the case has been indoctrinated with one form of ecclesiasticism or another, and equates the infallibility of early apostolic practice with that of Christ.
4. The life, sayings and teachings of Jesus Christ during his forty months’ mission was not superseded by any of the apostles or what they wrote.
5. The harmony of the four gospels must be centred upon the life, practice, and sayings of the Lord Jesus Christ wherever there appears conflict.
6. Humanity will alone be judged by the sayings and words of Christ, not those of the apostles. This applies to both the goats and the sheep, the former at the Great White Throne and the latter at the Judgment Seat of Christ.
7. Since the 19th C Bible churches have overreacted to apostate Higher Bible Criticism and gone into bibliolatrous literalism. Thus they have elevated the actions and words of the apostles to supersede those of the Lord Jesus. Each church movement has often clung to its own unique version of baptism and Lord’s Supper as its distinctive articles of faith that justify its separatist cause.
8. There is no conflict between the Lord’s practice before or after the cross. Students normally learn to harmonize the differences in the data of the four gospel authors, by tolerating their recording errors. Yet when it comes to the obvious discrepancies of the Galilean Commission each turns a blind eye because apostate Christendom wants to cling to the water-wine-wafer paradigm as methods of controlling entry and exit to their respective folds.

9. Of the three apostolic commissions only one is consistent with the prophecies of Zechariah; John the Baptist; the practice of Christ; and the Mt. Olivet record of the ascension. It is found in St. Luke 24; St. John 20; and Acts 1.

All focus on the events around Jerusalem and its adjoining Mount of Olives where Jesus often slept at night in the Garden of Gethsemane. The other two apostolic commissions were said to have been issued on an unnamed mountain in Galilee, 60 miles to the north. Suddenly added to the end of Matthew and Mark they leave the reader with a watery imposition.

Jesus was baptized by John (the last prophet of the Law) as an obedient Jew of the tribe of David (Judah) at age thirty. Leaving Jordan’s water his heavenly Father immediately anointed him audibly and visibly with the Spirit for his kingdom ministry. Therewith the line of demarcation was drawn between his old role as a Jew under the Levite priesthood and his new role as High Priest of the kingdom. Thenceforth his one mission was to fulfil his destiny on the cross, in his resurrection, and his final ascension forty days later.

John the Baptist and the ascension angel predicted Jesus would baptize members of his kingdom with fire, not water. Once he commenced his kingdom ministry he neither commanded nor practiced water baptism. This is most obvious even in the books of Matthew and Mark during his four year itinerary.

10. Thus the second and third apostolic commissions recorded in Galilee did not supersede the official Olivet ascension commission.

11. Many scholars from the broad spectrum of theology doubt the origin of Mark 16: 9-20, which does not appear in the most ancient extant Greek manuscripts.

12. Bible readers will also note that Matthew’s Trinitarian invocatory blessing was never adopted by the apostles in the baptisms in Luke’s book of Acts. This indicates that they were unaware of such a Galilean edict. They followed Peter’s water baptism at Pentecost, not Jesus’ for he had never baptized anyone during their time with him. His commission from Jerusalem did not order them to baptize in water. Phillip, Ananias and Paul using Peter’s precedent followed John the Baptist’s rite invoking the one name of Jesus Christ. However, they differed with each other’s administration of John’s baptism. Both Peter and Paul made radical changes: the former never again preached baptismal regeneration and the latter abandoned baptism after Corinth focusing instead on the baptism of the Spirit into the body of Christ (1 Cor.12:13).

13. From the 3rd C Roman paganistic customs and worship started to creep into Christian gatherings. Particularly was this so after the first church building was erected. Previously they had only met secretly in homes. Leaders began to use the title of priest and bishop to compete with idolatrous Roman religions. After three centuries of rabid pogroms and burnt earth persecution the Christians were given tolerance in the 4th C by the new emperor Constantine. Whereas there had been a subtle creeping change to formalism in the 3rd C, now came radical change to litany, liturgy and enforced sacraments for the masses by Constantine’s new Church of Rome.

14. The emperor’s right hand man was Bishop Eusebius, credited as the father of Church History. We should remember that this history was not Christian, but the history of the Church of Rome. Indeed all that the Church Fathers (apostolic Church Fathers) wrote was strongly slanted towards Romanism and heresy. Yet most seminaries and Bible colleges turn a convenient blind eye to this fact because of the shades of ecumenism and apostasy.

15. Most Protestant churches still retain Rome’s remaining sacramental doctrine without realizing its origin. Of the 2,800 denominations (Barratt 1970) communion and baptism has often been the cause of divisive sectarian separatism spawning hundreds upon hundreds of new denominations.

16. As 16th C reformers translated the original tongue of the New Testament into English they purged five of the seven Roman sacraments from the Latin New Testament not found in the Greek original. The Old Latin and Vulgate Latin Bible of the Roman Church had been in vogue for thirteen hundred years. The seven sacraments were added by Emperor Constantine to his fifty new Latin Bibles to authorize his compulsory nationalization of Christianity heralded at the inaugural founding of his Roman Church about 311 AD.

17. Because two of the seven sacraments were in the Greek manuscripts, the humanist scholar Erasmus included them in the first published Greek New Testament. The French publisher Stephanus and Elzevir failed to challenge this and the Textus Receptus of Puritan Bible translators left them intact.

18. Luther, Tyndale, Calvin, and Zwingli all differed with each other in their respective sacramental practice of water-wine-wafer. Each was ill at ease with the two surviving Roman rites. This caused division, disunity and disarray in the disparate Eucharistic practice. Rejecting transubstantiation, they wavered between consubstantiation, and mere memorial remembrance. In baptism they hesitantly selected baptismal regeneration, infant baptism, or believers’ baptism, while the method was sprinkling, pouring, or immersing candidates.

19. Nevertheless, one thing is held in common: the two Roman sacraments are good tools of administrative control. They are used to determine who will gain membership, or who needs to be expelled from membership of each religious clique, called the church, (ecclesia) a Latin word not found in the Greek New Testament and omitted by Tyndale in the first English publication of 1526. This so infuriated the Catholics and Anglicans that they burned or banned it before martyring him at the stake. Only when the word was replaced in the text did the English Church allow its publication. In the Koine Greek (ekklesia) means a ‘called out to assemble or congregate’. The early Christians were called out by God to leave the Jewish church at first, then to forsake the Roman church in the 4th C.

20. Early Reformers from the 13th C onwards had begun to abandon Roman ecclesiastic traditions and rites practiced since Emperor Constantine’s forcible takeover of Christianity.

21. The Waldensian, Albigensian, Hussite, Lollard, and Huguenot Christians were reformers before Luther posted his 1517 thesis of ‘the just shall live by faith’. Humanist scholars like Erasmus became involved with the Reformers’ quest in the 15th C

22. The great hurdles to anyone daring to complete the long overdue Reformation of the 16th C seem immoveable, but Luther’s unending echo of holy writ cannot be silenced: the ‘just shall live by faith’, not by water, wine or wafer.

CONCLUDING CHALLENGE
Many fanatically defend inerrancy of Scripture, but miss the final arbiter and filter of all Scripture: the very words of Christ himself; his practice and precepts during his forty months stay on earth before his death.

1. BELIEVER AND UNBELIEVER WILL BE JUDGED BY THESE WORDS
John 12:48 He that rejects me, and receives not my words, hath one that judges him: the word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day.

2. THE MOST IMPORTANT APOSTLE: No other apostle equates to his infallibility.
Hebrews 3:1 Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the heavenly calling, consider the Apostle and High Priest of our profession, Christ Jesus;

3. READING SCRIPTURE BUT MISSING THE CORNERSTONE OF TRUTH
John 5:39 Search the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: and they are they which testify of me.

4. RARELY WILL A BELIEVER DO THIS.
Acts 17:11 (the Berean believers)…they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.

5. ONLY MT OLIVET APOSTOLIC COMMISSION IS VALID (not the Galilean)
Acts 1:10 And while they looked steadfastly toward heaven as he went up, behold, two men stood by them in white apparel; 11 Which also said, Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven. 12 Then returned they unto Jerusalem from the mount called Olivet, which is from Jerusalem a Sabbath day’s journey.

Zechariah 14:4 And his feet shall stand in that day upon the mount of Olives, which is before Jerusalem on the east, and the mount of Olives shall cleave in the midst thereof…

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT.
1. During his 40 months’ ministry before his arrest neither Jesus nor the Twelve baptized others. The rumour in John 3 was mostly dispelled in John 4. The rumour was never endorsed anywhere else in the gospels and the Lord disavowed it by immediately leaving the area where he had been fellowshipping with his cousin John.

2. After his death and at the resurrection on the first day, then the fortieth day he gave the substance of his apostolic commission. Luke 24; John 20; Acts 1.
3. Only one commission was given and it was not on an unknown mountain in Galilee, but at Jerusalem in Judea 60 miles south.
a. This commission confirmed that Christ’s baptism of kingdom believers would be in fire not water, as prophesied by John the Baptist in Matthew 3 etcetera.
b. At no time anywhere recorded in the four gospel narrative of those 40 months did Jesus either baptize in water or command the Twelve to do so.
c. The Mount of Olives was confirmed and verified as the ascension mount to which he will descend in his return at the end of the age. See Zechariah 14:4 and Acts 1:11
d. St. Matthew’s Galilean baptismal commission invoked the trinity, but this form was not used by the four baptizers in Acts, indicating that the Eleven were unaware of its existence.
e. St. Mark’s Galilean baptismal commission was radically different in its compulsion and penalty for lack thereof. More importantly, historians, academics and even conservative scholars agree that the original vss. 9-20 had been lost and replaced by an unknown hand. The last half of St. Mark is missing from the most ancient extant manuscripts.
The geographic placement and content of both second and third apostolic commissions 60 miles distant in Galilee were:
i. contrary to the prophecy of John the Baptist, in Matthew 3:11
ii. contrary to the prophecy of John the Baptist in Mark 1:8
iii. contrary to the prophecy of John the Baptist in Luke 3:16
iv. contrary to the words of Christ in Acts 1:5
v. contrary to angels prophesying the place of His return Acts 1:11
vi. contrary to Zechariah’s prophecy of His return Zechariah 14:4
SPECIAL NOTE:
Ironically, the very two gospels that hastily close with a baptismal imprimatur, prophesy that Jesus would not baptize with water but with the Holy Ghost. It also places serious questions over Peter’s sudden institution of baptismal regeneration when Jesus had neither baptized them or any other candidate for His kingdom of heaven.
Furthermore, if Peter was infallible, as some would claim, why did he immediately abandon baptismal regeneration, (making baptism a condition of remission) for other changing forms of the Jewish water rite that the Jerusalem assembly demanded alongside circumcision for membership?

At Samaria Phillip’s baptism did not trigger the new birth. Only when Peter and John went there did the believers receive the Spirit.
Peter in Caesarea witnessed the same scenario when Gentiles were both regenerated and baptized with the Spirit during his sermon without any water rite.

In his second sermon in Jerusalem (Acts 3-4) Peter solely preached on the baptism of the Spirit. He actually avoided the Jewish water rite as he preached.

Paul’s emphasis after Ephesus and Corinth became the baptism of the Spirit and he appears to have gradually ceased using the water rite (1 Corinthians 1:17; 12:13; Ephesians 5:4). Indeed his emphasis in Galatians, Romans, and Colossians Paul alludes primarily to the baptism of fire, not water. The two accounts of Paul’s own baptism by Ananias of Damascus in Acts reveal the link between early Jewish baptismal regeneration, John the Baptist, and the priestly “water of separation for remission of sins. Cp. Numbers 19:9 (“for a water of separation: it is a purification for sin”).

Water baptism, implemented by Peter, was usually preceded by the baptism of fire. That is the Spirit’s work of grace in the heart of the seeker occurring before the Jewish rite was applied.

With John the Baptist, the last prophet of the Law, confession of sins always preceded his baptism of the candidate, though Old Testament remission had never been a blotting out of iniquities or expiation for they were remembered again on the Day of Atonement and re-confessed. In the kingdom’s atonement through Christ’s body that bore our sins to give the believer his righteousness, those iniquities would be “remembered no more”.

COMPLETING THE REFORMATION 500 YEARS LATER.

CHRISTENDOM’S CHAOS: WATER, WINE, & WAFER.

THE CHAOS OF CHRISTENDOM OVER WATER WINE AND WAFER. (Part 1)
1. The readability of this radical article is dependent upon whether or not the reader is totally captive to any one church, or the Man of the Book, Jesus Christ.

2. The primacy of Jesus’ practice and teaching during his life-time ministry is more sacrosanct than those of flawed human apostles; or early Roman Church Fathers (apostolic fathers) in the post apostolic period of the 2nd C and 3rd C.

3. Whoever thinks that is not the case has been indoctrinated with one form of ecclesiasticism or another, and equates the infallibility of early apostolic practice with that of Christ.

4. The life, sayings and teachings of Jesus Christ during his forty months’ mission was not superseded by others writing after his death in the posthumous period before he rose from the grave.

5. There should be no conflict between his practice before Calvary and the Great Commission to the Eleven. If there are two opposing apostolic commissions in the first five books of the New Testament the only one acceptable is that consistent with the New Testament predictions by John the last prophet of the Law; the Lord Jesus himself, and Old Testament prophets.

6. This position may seem radically wrong to most believers who have been so indoctrinated from birth with the religion of Rome’s water, wine and wafer of any Roman styled sacramental denomination. Whether in the East or the West this position will also appear disturbing to Rome’s ‘separated brethren in Protestant or non Roman churches that comprise Christendom’s 2,800 denominations (Barratt 1970).

7. The reformers exiting from Roman Catholicism did not go far enough. They dumped 5 of The Holy Roman Empire’s seven sacraments added by the Emperor to the Latin Bible, but failed to examine Constantine’s 4th C Greek yet for inconsistencies in reaming two. Those water, wine and wafer rites caused division, disunity and disarray in disparate practices of transubstantiation, consubstantiation, and Zwinglian memorialism.

8. The student researcher of the Scriptures, like the Bereans is urged to ‘search the Scriptures to see if these things be so’. Hasty or indignant rejection of this short thesis as mere ideology is caused by addiction to one apostle or another; saturation by ecclesiastical tradition; pontificating clergy, or dishonest pragmatic intellectualization.

9. Of the five Roman Church’s sacraments the early Reformers from the 14th C Renaissance onwards began to abandon the ecclesiastic traditions, precedents, and practice of the thousand years after Constantine’s compulsory nationalization of Christianity.

10. The Waldensian, Albigensian, Hussite, Lollard, and Huguenot Christians were reformers even before Luther posted his 1517 thesis of ‘the just shall live by faith’. Even humanist scholars like Erasmus became involved with the Reformers’ quest.

TO BE CONTINUED.

CHRISTENDOM’S CHAOS: WATER, WINE, & WAFER.

HOW SAINTS READ THE BIBLE. (5)

HOW SAINTS READ THE BIBLE. (5)
There are multitudes who read the Bible for various motives. Some even think that of itself the practice of devotional reading gives all sorts of divine benefits.

Many presume that adopting its positivist philosophy equates to faith, but the artifice of wearing a smile and voicing optimistic sentiments do little to camouflage such pretence, despite the peer pressure to do so. In fact the large majority who read the Scripture only make token gesture effort to search the WORD, because they have not the Spirit within.

Excuses by half hearted readers.
1) EXCUSE: I do not want to be tied down. If I have time I will look at the Bible today.
a. ANSWER: This attitude belongs to a religious goat dependent upon his self-will.
b. ANSWER:A sheep (saint) has an irrepressible thirst for the Word which cannot be repressed. The goat is at ease and reads only what is convenient.

2)EXCUSE: ‘I don’t always feel like reading the Bible if I am having a bad day.
a. ANSWER: Emotions matter to the goat, but the sheep is another creature and will not be deterred.

HOW SAINTS READ THE BIBLE. (5)