T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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914.1 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu May 05 1994 19:54 | 2 |
| Be ye separate from the world... ye are in the world, but not of the
world.
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914.2 | A subject of the Sovereign's | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Fri May 06 1994 00:38 | 7 |
| I agree. Our ultimate loyalty is not to any power or nation on Earth,
but to the Realm of the Sovereign. We are to be actively engaged, but
not enmeshed, with our temporal environment.
Shalom,
Richard
|
914.3 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Fri May 06 1994 11:23 | 25 |
| I had a tough class last night. seventy eight Christians, one quiet
Unitarian Universalist, and me studying Revelations.
I left hating the book of Revelations. I made the unpopular comment
that the book of Revelations is appalling to non Christians.
In today's world which is different than the 1 century C.E. the idea of
Christians being resident aliens is very different. It smacks of a
religious imperialism. It is Manifest Destiny for all the world to
become Christian. Well fortunately it isn't but many Christians lament
that because of the exlusivity inherent in a literal reading of the
Bible.
How different the term resident alien is when applied to 1 century
Christians facing the death penalty for not forshipping idols, to
twentieth century Christians threatening the everlasting death penalty
to those who will not worship the Bible.
Should we all find hope and joy in our conviction that we are one of
the 144, 000 marked for everlasting glory, while the rest of our
brothers and sisters are marked for doom, torture, and destruction at
the hands of a benevolent god.
Patricia/
a resident alien in a Christian land.
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914.4 | Revelation (no "s") | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Be there | Fri May 06 1994 12:58 | 2 |
|
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914.5 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Be there | Fri May 06 1994 13:07 | 18 |
|
David Jeremiah, Pastor of Shadow Mountain Community church in San Diego
California has been doing an excellent study of the book of Revelation
on his daily radio program "Turning Point". Right now they are in
Chapter 18 I believe.
"Appalling to Non Christians"....well, I suppose it is. Not sure how
they will feel about it when what they read about is actually taking place
at some point in the future, particularly when the Christ they have rejected
becomes very real to them.
Jim
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914.6 | | FRETZ::HEISER | no D in Phoenix | Fri May 06 1994 13:42 | 16 |
| > Should we all find hope and joy in our conviction that we are one of
> the 144, 000 marked for everlasting glory, while the rest of our
> brothers and sisters are marked for doom, torture, and destruction at
> the hands of a benevolent god.
I know JW's believe this, and it appears that you do as well: "Christ's
blood shed on Calvary applies only to 144,000 elite JW's (the "Israel of
God") and not for the "great crowd," the remainder of JW's (Aid to Bible
Understanding, p. 389)."
This is contrary to the whole context of the Bible. Christ died on behalf
of all men (I Timothy 2:5-6, I John 2:2, II Corinthians 5:15, Hebrews 2:9)
and said He is preparing a place for those who trust Him, and that place
will be with Him (John 14:1-3).
Mike
|
914.7 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Fri May 06 1994 13:57 | 9 |
| I'm a Christian and I find the Revelation repulsive, obtuse, and really
no longer relevant.
This topic was derived not from the Revelation, but from the letter called
I Peter.
Shalom,
Richard
|
914.8 | Slight misunderstanding? | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Fri May 06 1994 13:58 | 19 |
| re .6
Mike,
I don't have the book "Aid to Bible Understanding", but I know for sure
that the "great crowd" mentioned in Revelation 7:9,14 do have the hope
of everlasting life. This is on earth as God orginally intended for
Adam and his offspring (Genesis 1:28, Isa 55:11). Hence, Christ's shed
blood will apply also to the "great crowd" as Revelation 7:14 points
out.
Those that go to heaven, the 144,000, will rule as priests and kings over
the earth (Revelation 5:9,10). Peter tells us that rightousness is to
dwell in the new earth or soceity (2 Peter 3:13), hence the "great
crowd" who come out of the great tribulation will enjoy blessings from
this kingdom of kings and priests in the heavens. All made possible
through Christ's shed blood.
Phil.
|
914.9 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri May 06 1994 14:14 | 14 |
| Rejection of the book of Revelation seems logical to me in the human
sense. But in the Spiritual sense, it is very illogical..
Revelations along with it's prophecies of the last day, also states
that there will no more tears in heaven and describes heaven to us.
For the Believer, the book of Revelation has no threat.
What it also can do for the believer is encourage us to be better soul
winners.
It's a book that motivates through love the need to spread the Gospel..
also in Revelation, Jesus likens salvation to a door...
Whoever knocks, him will I enter in.
|
914.10 | | MARLIN::KLIMOWICZ | | Fri May 06 1994 14:27 | 58 |
| Patricia,
If you look at a the passages in Revelations again, you will notice that
144,000 refers to all the tribes of Israel, and also a multitude THAT NO
ONE COULD COUNT from all parts of the world.
Also, if the 144,000 refer to the only ones who will be worthy of heaven,
then will WOMEN be unworthy of heaven??? I don't think so! I know of
many Christian women that are 1000 times more worthy of heaven than I am!
REV 14:4 These are those who did not defile themselves with
WOMEN, for they kept themselves pure...
----------------------------------------------------------------
REV 7:4 Then I heard the number of those who were sealed:
144000 from all the tribes of Israel.
(The 12 tribes are listed)
REV 7:9 After this I looked and there before me was a great
multitude that no one could count, from EVERY NATION
TRIBE, PEOPLE AND LANGUAGE, standing before the throne
and in front of the Lamb. They were wearing WHITE ROBES..
REV 7:13 Then one of the elders asked me, "These in WHITE ROBES
- who are they, and where did they come from?
And he said, "These are they who have come out of the
great tribulation; they have washed their robes and made
them WHITE IN THE BLOOD OF THE LAMB.
Therefore,"they are before the throne of God and serve him
day and night in his temple and who sits on the throne will
spread a tent over them. Never again will they hunger; never
again will they thirst. The sun will not beat upon them,
nor the scorching heat.
For the Lamb at the center of the throne will be their
shepherd; he will lead them to springs of living water;
And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.
Jesus wants all of us to spend eternety with him, and I pray that every
one may understand the greatness of his love, and the shedding of his blood
for us.
REV 3:19 Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be
earnest, and repent.
:20 HERE I AM! I stand at the door and knock. If
anyone opens the door, I will come in and eat
with him, and he with me,
:21 To him who overcomes, I will give the right to
sit on my throne, just as I overcame and sat
down with my Father on his throne..
God Bless,
Oleg
|
914.11 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Fri May 06 1994 15:04 | 24 |
| Richard,
I am glad you find Revelation repulsive, obtuse and no longer relevant.
The reaction in class was interesting in that I know that there is a
range from conservative Christians to more liberal Christians. It felt
like no one in the class other than I spoke out against revelation.
Two people acknowledged my statement to me after class.
We also talked about Judas and 2 Peter in the class. The question was
should they be excluded from the Canon. The class answer was
overwhelmingly No! even though there was overwheming feeling that they
were of a far less quality than the rest of the Bible. The class
reaction was that Canon should not be messed with even with all the
modern understanding of how things were canonized.
THere is Faith in the process by which God inspired the canonization
process but absolutely no Faith that a Living God could also inspire a
recononization process. It makes me thing that Christians must think
that God was much more powerful in the Biblical period than he/she is
today.
Patricia
|
914.12 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri May 06 1994 15:11 | 5 |
| >The class
> reaction was that Canon should not be messed with even with all the
> modern understanding of how things were canonized.
I am curious as to what makes our modern understanding more accurate?
|
914.13 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Fri May 06 1994 15:47 | 12 |
| As was quoted yesterday, the book of James made it into the cannon by
one vote. The hand of God argument states that so what, God controlled
the process.
So if a faith community decided to create a new canon, why don't
Christians have faith that the Living God would control that process as
well?
It sounds like institutional Christianity has more faith in the Bible than
faith in God.
Patricia
|
914.14 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Fri May 06 1994 16:36 | 14 |
| Note 914.13
> It sounds like institutional Christianity has more faith in the Bible than
> faith in God.
Patricia,
I would concur, except I would give greater emphasis to
non-institutional Christianity. There is no shortage of bibliolators
at this moment in time.
Peace,
Richard
|
914.15 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | Resident Alien | Fri May 06 1994 17:04 | 4 |
| So is it then the non institutional Christians who are the resident
aliens?
Patricia
|
914.16 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Fri May 06 1994 18:43 | 14 |
| .15 No, not necessarily.
When I say resident alien, I don't mean to signal that Christians
should not take full responsibility to bring about the Realm of God
on Earth. And, I don't mean that Christians should be isolated,
cut off or "separate."
I do mean that if one is doing it right, the Christian will appear
to be eccentric, foolish, even subversively outlandish. And not without
good reason, either.
Shalom,
Richard
|
914.17 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri May 06 1994 19:42 | 1 |
| Was .13 the answer to my question?
|
914.18 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Be there | Fri May 06 1994 22:29 | 10 |
|
The "Realm of God"? Has that replaced "kingdom of God"?
Jim
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914.19 | As in "El Camino Real" -- the King's Highway | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 06 1994 22:32 | 5 |
| "Realm" means "kingdom".
"Real" means "king".
/john
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914.20 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Be there | Sat May 07 1994 11:59 | 19 |
|
Thanks...I wondered if perhaps "realm" was a pc version of "kingdom"
false alarm, I guess.
Jim quite familiar with "El Camino Real" having lived near such a highway
much of his life
Jim
|
914.21 | Call it PC if you want | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Sat May 07 1994 14:27 | 10 |
| .20 You're free, of course, to consider it pc, as all this pc
and counter-pc business is simply a matter of mind and attitude
anyway.
The word 'realm' is freer of gender distinction than 'kingdom.' If
that's what you're keeping a careful watch out for, you've found
it.
Richard
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914.22 | some fwiw's on Revelation | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Sat May 07 1994 19:24 | 12 |
|
From what little I know of Revelation, it is symbolic and extremely
yogic in nature. For example, the 7 candlesticks, angels, stars, and
the like, really refer to the 7 main energy centers in the body, known
in Sanskrit as the chakras. Read from this perspective, the words tend
to take on a whole new meaning.
Apart from that though, there is the reference to 'Wormwood'...in a
reading I came across recently, apparently 'Chernobyl' translates to
'Wormwood', which was kind of interesting.
Cindy
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914.23 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Be there | Sun May 08 1994 16:54 | 14 |
|
.21
Thanks..i wasn't keeping a close watch out for anything, though I'll confess
to a curiousity about why some are intent on removing gender specific
language from the Word of God, as though we have such a right to do so.
Jim
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914.24 | Let's be *completely* consistent | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Sun May 08 1994 17:40 | 9 |
| Perhaps we also had no right to place Scriptures on the printed page
or the cathode ray tube, instead of the scroll, or better yet, stone
tablets.
Perhaps we had no right to write any of it down, since 'God's Word'
was oral long before any of its more contemporary forms.
Richard
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914.25 | Would Jesus be politically correct? | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | Resident Alien | Mon May 09 1994 11:51 | 7 |
| and we are really forbidden to expose the revolutionary natue of the
Word of God against the keepers of the gate of Male dominance and rule.
Would Jesus be accused of the scandel of political correctness if he
revealed himself/herself today?
Patricia
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914.26 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Be there | Mon May 09 1994 15:39 | 16 |
|
> Would Jesus be accused of the scandel of political correctness if he
> revealed himself/herself today?
I doubt it..I suspect he'd be speaking rather pointedly at the sin that
is rampant in this world today.
Jim
|
914.28 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Mon May 09 1994 16:03 | 2 |
| .27 Interesting p_n you've got there, Patricia! ;-}
|
914.29 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | Resident Alien | Mon May 09 1994 16:24 | 7 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I agree. The sin of sexism, rascism, and homophobia being some of the
sins he would be outraged at.
Patricia
is that better Richard?
|
914.30 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Copernicus 3:16 | Mon May 09 1994 17:41 | 17 |
| The Bible contains the Word of God, but the book itself is not the
Word of God. (Of course, I fully expect others to disagree with this
summation.)
I can explain why I choose the (pc) word 'realm' in place of 'kingdom,'
which, I might add, I don't always do.
None of us really knows firsthand what it's like to live under a
monarchy, except perhaps the titular variety. So why not use terms
which make the message(s) of the Bible evermore real and relevant?
By using the word 'realm' I'm not compromising the substance, but
merely altering the form. Some people get the two mixed up.
Shalom,
Richard
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914.31 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue May 10 1994 10:36 | 6 |
| RE: .30
I like your first paragraph! Nice phrase.
Marc H.
|